| Introduction
General Mars Implications of Life Life
Data
Analysis |
Scientific
Research and Design
The following five basic charactertics were
used as the definition of life for this mission design: We have chosen to define life as having these five characteristics in order to try to accommodate all forms of life, including those which are vastly different from Earth life. This definition, based on energy properties of living systems rather than chemical properties, attempts to avoid biases introduced by human experiences with the particular form of life on Earth. Each of these properties, however, is fully met by every organism on Earth, so it does not exclude objects widely accepted as living. The generality of our definition leads to great difficulties in implementation, however. Growth and replication take time to measure, and may require prior knowledge of appropriate growth media and nutrients. Purposeful energy transfer is difficult to treat quantitatively, since the moniker of “purposeful” is subject to many different interpretations. It is difficult to know what kinds of stimuli a candidate organism might respond to, making it almost impossible to find and recognize a response. Self-preservation is also a subjective term, and very difficult to apply to microorganisms. Finally, differences with the surrounding environment are very difficult to detect in a systematic fashion, and the level of difference necessary for an object to qualify as alive is difficult to determine. Due to these problems, our practical
definition of life must be much more restrictive. In effect, our
experiments have been designed to look for carbon-based life, and for its
chemical signatures. While other chemical forms of life are not
covered by our working definition, it may be possible to detect and
characterize such entities. Unfortunately, energy characteristics
are simply too general and too difficult to measure to be the basis of
experimentation. Definition of Past Life Unfortunately, the properties that characterize fossils of Earth life are somewhat less developed than those characterizing living organisms. Obviously, the chemical composition will be radically different in a fossil, and no metabolism or growth can be measured. Thus, the definition of life must be modified and restricted further in order to be sufficient to describe fossils. We are using the following definition. We consider fossils to fit several of the
following characteristics: Sources: |
Comments and questions to mission2004-students@mit.edu Last updated: 10 December, 2000 |