If life exists on Mars, it will have sought refuge underground.
Trying to uncover one of the best-kept secrets in the Solar System,
scientists are working a kilometre beneath the ground, with ESA
astronaut Matthias Maurer joining them this week.
Teams from around the world are gathering at
the UK's Boulby Mine to test new technologies for exploring Mars and the
Moon. Almost 30 people are venturing into the deep for the fifth Mine
Analogue Research (MINAR) sortie.
They have been testing a wide range of equipment for two weeks,
including a robotic hammer to chisel rock and expose fresh surfaces for
signs of life.
A team from the University of Leicester carefully monitors the performance of a tool that could one day be part of a Mars rover.
Matthias will take part in several more campaigns this year. Next up
is ESA's Pangaea geology field training in Lanzarote, Spain. There, the
hammer will be used to pound the rocks of the Mars-like landscape to
test a human-robot partnership for future planetary excursions.
In these campaigns astronauts can learn from scientists and
instrument specialists how to use life-detection equipment, drills and
cameras for robotic and human exploration.
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