1 00:00:01,480 --> 00:00:05,920 (instrumental music) 2 00:00:02,000 --> 00:00:07,000 Downloaded from YTS.MX 3 00:00:08,000 --> 00:00:13,000 Official YIFY movies site: YTS.MX 4 00:00:08,320 --> 00:00:11,840 NARRATOR: 140 million miles from Earth. 5 00:00:15,000 --> 00:00:20,560 Our planetary neighbor and our greatest mystery... 6 00:00:24,760 --> 00:00:26,000 Mars. 7 00:00:28,920 --> 00:00:32,320 For centuries we've gazed at it in wonder. 8 00:00:35,080 --> 00:00:38,320 But it's always remained out of our reach... 9 00:00:39,840 --> 00:00:42,640 until now. 10 00:00:51,640 --> 00:00:54,240 Today a pioneering spacecraft 11 00:00:54,320 --> 00:00:57,400 is bringing the planet dramatically closer. 12 00:01:00,200 --> 00:01:05,440 Pixel by pixel, it's beaming Mars back to us... 13 00:01:06,200 --> 00:01:08,760 as we've never seen it before. 14 00:01:13,920 --> 00:01:16,160 Now using these images, 15 00:01:18,040 --> 00:01:20,640 we can do something remarkable. 16 00:01:24,440 --> 00:01:28,080 And take you on a journey no human being 17 00:01:28,160 --> 00:01:30,640 has ever been on before. 18 00:01:33,600 --> 00:01:36,440 A single circuit of this world 19 00:01:37,840 --> 00:01:41,880 from dawn to dusk. 20 00:01:44,960 --> 00:01:47,720 Exploring its most spectacular... 21 00:01:50,720 --> 00:01:53,400 and surprising features. 22 00:01:55,280 --> 00:01:56,560 (rumbling) 23 00:01:57,840 --> 00:02:01,400 On a mission to unlock its deepest secrets. 24 00:02:07,360 --> 00:02:13,360 And we join the quest to answer the biggest question of all. 25 00:02:17,640 --> 00:02:22,440 Is there life on Mars? 26 00:02:35,520 --> 00:02:38,480 (beeping) 27 00:02:48,040 --> 00:02:51,920 Our journey begins at a vast black spot, 28 00:02:52,480 --> 00:02:54,440 one thousand miles wide. 29 00:03:01,400 --> 00:03:05,760 This is where humanity's dream of Mars first began. 30 00:03:07,400 --> 00:03:10,600 It's called Syrtis Major. 31 00:03:17,280 --> 00:03:23,280 Hidden in this intriguing landscape is a mysterious feature, 32 00:03:27,920 --> 00:03:32,840 that first made us hope that Mars could be Earth's sister. 33 00:03:36,080 --> 00:03:39,680 Another planet teaming with life. 34 00:03:51,720 --> 00:03:54,840 DERRICK: It's almost unthinkable that just 100 years ago, 35 00:03:54,920 --> 00:03:58,800 people actually thought that there was civilizations on Mars 36 00:03:59,800 --> 00:04:01,960 and if there was a civilization there, 37 00:04:02,040 --> 00:04:04,320 what was the civilization like? 38 00:04:04,960 --> 00:04:07,200 Did they have commerce? Did they have language? 39 00:04:08,560 --> 00:04:11,200 Could we communicate with them? 40 00:04:11,960 --> 00:04:15,720 Was there any chance for space travel so that we could connect with them? 41 00:04:21,520 --> 00:04:25,840 NARRATOR: Here in Flagstaff, Arizona, in 1894, 42 00:04:27,720 --> 00:04:32,280 a Mars obsessed astronomer built a state of the art telescope, 43 00:04:33,440 --> 00:04:38,040 to study the red planet in more detail than ever before. 44 00:04:39,720 --> 00:04:43,760 What Percival Lowell saw would shock the world. 45 00:04:46,480 --> 00:04:48,080 On the surface of the planet, 46 00:04:49,000 --> 00:04:53,920 he made out patterns, structures, movement. 47 00:04:55,440 --> 00:04:58,600 Mars appeared to be alive. 48 00:05:03,200 --> 00:05:06,360 DERRICK: He looked at Mars every opportunity he had 49 00:05:06,440 --> 00:05:08,960 and he kept records of what he saw. 50 00:05:09,960 --> 00:05:13,240 Here are three of Percival Lowell's globes. 51 00:05:13,640 --> 00:05:16,800 He's detailed out the regions of vegetation. 52 00:05:17,680 --> 00:05:21,280 He also seemed to observe the change in the vegetation 53 00:05:21,360 --> 00:05:23,720 over time and over seasons. 54 00:05:24,080 --> 00:05:27,160 He's included vast networks of canals, 55 00:05:27,480 --> 00:05:30,120 bringing water from the melting polar caps 56 00:05:30,200 --> 00:05:33,480 down to the drier, dying regions of the planet, 57 00:05:33,560 --> 00:05:37,320 providing water for the civilizations that he imagined that lived there. 58 00:05:41,880 --> 00:05:44,280 NARRATOR: In the years after Lowell's discovery, 59 00:05:46,080 --> 00:05:48,920 Mars fever gripped our planet. 60 00:05:50,720 --> 00:05:51,920 (rumbling) 61 00:05:52,000 --> 00:05:54,720 We imagined alien oceans, 62 00:05:55,880 --> 00:06:01,480 exotic landscapes and bustling cities. 63 00:06:03,320 --> 00:06:06,320 Even Martians staring back at us. 64 00:06:07,720 --> 00:06:09,400 (roaring) 65 00:06:13,640 --> 00:06:17,360 But we didn't get a chance to find out if we were right, 66 00:06:17,920 --> 00:06:20,160 until 1964. 67 00:06:20,480 --> 00:06:24,760 MAN (over radio): Three, two, one, zero. 68 00:06:24,840 --> 00:06:27,640 All engines running, lift off. 69 00:06:29,280 --> 00:06:31,400 Roger, one, three seconds. 70 00:06:33,320 --> 00:06:34,480 MAN 2 (over radio): We're on our way. 71 00:06:38,120 --> 00:06:41,640 NARRATOR: Mariner 4 was NASA's first successful mission 72 00:06:41,720 --> 00:06:42,840 to the red planet. 73 00:06:47,680 --> 00:06:50,920 At last a chance to study Mars up close. 74 00:06:53,680 --> 00:06:55,720 There was pressure. There was definite pressure. 75 00:06:55,800 --> 00:06:58,040 We were inventing stuff every step of the way. 76 00:06:59,120 --> 00:07:00,440 It was exciting. 77 00:07:00,520 --> 00:07:04,320 But you're working hard, had guys working 50, 60 hours a week. 78 00:07:05,840 --> 00:07:09,160 This was the 60's, the dawn of the space age. 79 00:07:09,240 --> 00:07:12,720 And it just fired our imagination about you know, what could be there? 80 00:07:12,800 --> 00:07:14,040 Who could be there? 81 00:07:14,120 --> 00:07:16,440 AMY: Mariner 4 was a huge deal, 82 00:07:16,520 --> 00:07:19,040 because we'd never really seen the surface of Mars, 83 00:07:19,120 --> 00:07:22,720 all we had was people looking at Mars with a telescope 84 00:07:22,800 --> 00:07:23,920 and drawing what they saw. 85 00:07:25,520 --> 00:07:27,800 The public was expecting to see these 86 00:07:27,880 --> 00:07:30,720 lush civilizations built by Martians. 87 00:07:30,800 --> 00:07:33,960 I was 13 and I actually can remember 88 00:07:34,040 --> 00:07:37,800 watching the 6:00 news and this was broadcast nationwide. 89 00:07:40,360 --> 00:07:42,480 NARRATOR: Nervously, the world waited to see 90 00:07:42,560 --> 00:07:46,120 the first ever close-up image of Mars. 91 00:07:55,880 --> 00:07:59,680 (indistinct conversation) 92 00:08:00,480 --> 00:08:02,840 MAN (over PA): Picture number one is coming in. 93 00:08:06,240 --> 00:08:08,080 JOHN: We didn't know what it was gonna look like. 94 00:08:08,680 --> 00:08:10,960 It took eight hours to get one picture back. 95 00:08:12,000 --> 00:08:14,080 We had these little tape recorders that would just 96 00:08:14,160 --> 00:08:16,560 print one line of numbers after another, 97 00:08:17,120 --> 00:08:19,760 and each pixel was represented by one number 98 00:08:19,840 --> 00:08:21,600 on this little strip chart. 99 00:08:24,120 --> 00:08:27,120 So we got the idea of, why didn't we just take that 100 00:08:27,200 --> 00:08:29,600 and color those numbers appropriately. 101 00:08:32,360 --> 00:08:38,120 NARRATOR: As the data came back, a picture emerged. 102 00:08:47,640 --> 00:08:50,240 MICHIO: It did not show a tropical environment 103 00:08:50,320 --> 00:08:52,600 with cities and gleaming skyscrapers. 104 00:08:52,680 --> 00:08:53,680 No. 105 00:08:54,920 --> 00:08:58,040 No canals, no oceans, no rivers. 106 00:08:58,120 --> 00:08:59,760 No vegetation, no forests. 107 00:08:59,840 --> 00:09:01,320 We didn't see any cities, 108 00:09:01,400 --> 00:09:03,680 we didn't see any Martians walking around at all. 109 00:09:05,520 --> 00:09:07,960 Mariner 4 was a historical bummer. 110 00:09:08,040 --> 00:09:09,600 (indistinct conversation) 111 00:09:13,000 --> 00:09:14,080 What amazed me was, 112 00:09:14,160 --> 00:09:15,680 when the first pictures came back, 113 00:09:15,760 --> 00:09:19,320 the first thing you noticed is that it's dominated with craters. 114 00:09:19,400 --> 00:09:22,120 I never heard anybody predict that. 115 00:09:22,200 --> 00:09:24,680 I did never hear anybody in the science community saying, 116 00:09:24,760 --> 00:09:26,000 "Well, when we get there, 117 00:09:26,080 --> 00:09:27,280 it's gonna look a lot like the moon. 118 00:09:27,360 --> 00:09:28,920 There's gonna be craters." 119 00:09:29,000 --> 00:09:30,600 No, there was never any of that. 120 00:09:32,760 --> 00:09:36,200 NARRATOR: For all our dreams of a living Mars, 121 00:09:37,000 --> 00:09:41,720 we seem to have found a dead, deserted world. 122 00:09:46,560 --> 00:09:49,000 How had we got it so wrong? 123 00:09:55,680 --> 00:09:58,120 Today we can see the answer. 124 00:10:02,120 --> 00:10:06,880 Circling above the planet's surface, a new electronic eye. 125 00:10:11,880 --> 00:10:15,680 This is NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter. 126 00:10:18,280 --> 00:10:20,520 On board, HiRISE-- 127 00:10:22,160 --> 00:10:27,000 the most powerful camera we have ever sent to another world. 128 00:10:35,800 --> 00:10:40,960 It's capturing Mars in unprecedented spectacular detail. 129 00:10:46,040 --> 00:10:48,680 The HiRISE camera is a game-changer. 130 00:10:55,520 --> 00:10:57,480 It gives us the illusion, 131 00:10:57,560 --> 00:11:00,400 the feeling of flying over Mars in a helicopter. 132 00:11:03,560 --> 00:11:06,760 The way you look out and almost touch the landscape. 133 00:11:20,200 --> 00:11:24,240 Think about it-- One pixel, one dot on the HiRISE photograph 134 00:11:24,320 --> 00:11:26,360 is the size of a basketball. 135 00:11:31,160 --> 00:11:37,000 NARRATOR: HiRISE is showing us that Mars is much more than a barren desert. 136 00:11:41,080 --> 00:11:46,160 It's revealing a world beyond our wildest imagination. 137 00:11:51,840 --> 00:11:55,440 JAMES: This is just not beautiful, it is magnificent. 138 00:11:58,000 --> 00:12:00,200 AMY: They look like abstract paintings. 139 00:12:02,600 --> 00:12:04,240 DAVID: The planet comes alive 140 00:12:04,320 --> 00:12:07,440 and you see this vibrancy and this-- this motion. 141 00:12:09,600 --> 00:12:12,560 TANYA: The beautiful color palette of this planet, 142 00:12:12,640 --> 00:12:15,560 that we've always just thought of as this red rock. 143 00:12:18,760 --> 00:12:20,880 DAVID: But once you can see things in that detail, 144 00:12:20,960 --> 00:12:23,640 it's like, whoa, I got a new prescription for my glasses 145 00:12:23,720 --> 00:12:27,840 and all of a sudden I can see the world, (stammers) only it's the world of Mars. 146 00:12:30,880 --> 00:12:35,920 NARRATOR: Using HiRISE data, we can now show you for the first time 147 00:12:36,000 --> 00:12:38,880 what Syrtis Major really looks like. 148 00:12:50,560 --> 00:12:53,440 This is a view no human has ever seen. 149 00:12:56,280 --> 00:12:58,280 Over 100 foot tall, 150 00:13:00,840 --> 00:13:03,360 stretching for 100 miles. 151 00:13:06,520 --> 00:13:09,480 These are the Nili Patera sand dunes. 152 00:13:15,920 --> 00:13:18,440 When Percival Lowell looked towards here, 153 00:13:19,160 --> 00:13:20,720 he thought he saw life. 154 00:13:28,040 --> 00:13:30,800 Today with HiRISE's powerful gaze, 155 00:13:30,880 --> 00:13:33,480 we can see how he got Mars so wrong. 156 00:13:36,400 --> 00:13:37,680 (electronic beep) 157 00:13:37,760 --> 00:13:42,600 The dunes move in the Martian wind. 158 00:13:48,400 --> 00:13:50,120 On a global scale, 159 00:13:50,200 --> 00:13:53,840 sand can be seen being blown around Mars' surface. 160 00:13:59,560 --> 00:14:03,600 The size of shape of regions like Syrtis Major 161 00:14:03,680 --> 00:14:04,960 ebb and flow. 162 00:14:09,240 --> 00:14:13,240 DERRICK: Percival Lowell could see these large shaded regions 163 00:14:13,320 --> 00:14:15,960 that seemed to grow and change over time. 164 00:14:16,440 --> 00:14:20,000 Maybe even seasonally, very much like we see vegetation 165 00:14:20,080 --> 00:14:22,440 changing with seasons here on Earth. 166 00:14:23,440 --> 00:14:27,000 He was actually observing dust storms and shifting sands 167 00:14:27,080 --> 00:14:28,600 on the surface of Mars. 168 00:14:31,520 --> 00:14:33,560 NARRATOR: But was Lowell completely wrong? 169 00:14:36,720 --> 00:14:39,120 For years, humanity thought so. 170 00:14:40,560 --> 00:14:42,960 But now using HiRISE imagery, 171 00:14:43,040 --> 00:14:45,680 we can glimpse something extraordinary. 172 00:14:48,360 --> 00:14:52,600 A Mars that may once have been much more like his vision. 173 00:14:54,600 --> 00:15:00,560 It's a story that begins at our next destination. 174 00:15:08,480 --> 00:15:09,840 (beeping) 175 00:15:17,400 --> 00:15:21,120 3,200 miles southwest of Syrtis Major, 176 00:15:22,080 --> 00:15:24,960 is a window into Mars' deepest past... 177 00:15:28,160 --> 00:15:29,760 Noachis Terra. 178 00:15:30,760 --> 00:15:31,960 Noah's Land. 179 00:15:37,280 --> 00:15:38,760 At first glance, 180 00:15:38,840 --> 00:15:41,080 this looks like another dead landscape, 181 00:15:43,360 --> 00:15:47,200 but it holds an astonishing clue to a very different world. 182 00:15:49,280 --> 00:15:52,920 A world with a real chance of life. 183 00:15:55,760 --> 00:15:58,720 This is one of the most ancient places on Mars. 184 00:15:58,800 --> 00:16:01,640 Noachis Terra is absolutely filled with craters. 185 00:16:03,160 --> 00:16:07,000 AMY: Some are huge, the size of a city or an entire state. 186 00:16:08,560 --> 00:16:12,400 Some of them are five or ten meters across, very small. 187 00:16:13,720 --> 00:16:15,800 We can also see that some craters have been 188 00:16:15,880 --> 00:16:18,080 overprinted with other craters. 189 00:16:19,560 --> 00:16:23,080 MICHIO: Simply by counting and analyzing these craters 190 00:16:23,160 --> 00:16:24,680 on Noachis Terra, 191 00:16:25,720 --> 00:16:29,440 we think it dates back almost four billion years. 192 00:16:34,000 --> 00:16:36,960 NARRATOR: Now we can build these craters from real data. 193 00:16:40,200 --> 00:16:43,320 Each is formed by a single meteorite impact, 194 00:16:44,520 --> 00:16:47,640 that punched through rocks, billions of years old. 195 00:16:49,240 --> 00:16:51,760 They are holes punched through time. 196 00:16:54,880 --> 00:16:59,960 These craters are like opening doors into the geology of Mars, 197 00:17:00,040 --> 00:17:02,840 we can use it to dig down through the various layers 198 00:17:02,920 --> 00:17:06,400 and we can see almost every kind of Mars there was. 199 00:17:11,160 --> 00:17:14,480 NARRATOR: These craters are 140 million miles away. 200 00:17:15,360 --> 00:17:19,080 So their secrets might seem beyond our grasp, 201 00:17:19,160 --> 00:17:21,760 but incredibly they can be unlocked. 202 00:17:26,480 --> 00:17:29,160 By a rock found on Earth. 203 00:17:38,000 --> 00:17:41,960 NARRATOR: This is a rock worth 200 times more than gold. 204 00:17:43,600 --> 00:17:46,240 A rare and revealing treasure. 205 00:17:47,880 --> 00:17:51,360 JAY: There's so many objects in this world that you can have. 206 00:17:51,440 --> 00:17:54,040 You can have diamonds, you could have gold, 207 00:17:54,120 --> 00:17:56,040 you could have houses, cars 208 00:17:56,120 --> 00:17:58,240 and they really don't do anything for me. 209 00:17:58,880 --> 00:18:01,560 And this is NWA 8-4-5-5. 210 00:18:01,640 --> 00:18:04,000 This is NWA 10-608. 211 00:18:04,080 --> 00:18:07,600 This is NWA 8-6-8-7, it's called a troctolite. 212 00:18:07,680 --> 00:18:10,400 And I liked it 'cause it was shaped like a star. (laughs) 213 00:18:13,080 --> 00:18:14,760 Meteorites are like my babies. 214 00:18:19,120 --> 00:18:21,800 Sometime around May of 2011, 215 00:18:21,880 --> 00:18:25,120 I had a friend in Morocco, he was a dealer. 216 00:18:25,200 --> 00:18:26,760 (camera clicking) 217 00:18:26,840 --> 00:18:30,720 He showed me a picture of this black rock found in the desert 218 00:18:30,800 --> 00:18:33,760 that looked unlike anything either of us ever seen. 219 00:18:34,920 --> 00:18:37,800 Then I said, "You know what, I think it's a meteorite." 220 00:18:40,200 --> 00:18:43,600 It's called Black Beauty, NWA 70-34. 221 00:18:45,040 --> 00:18:47,440 And I loved when I got it in my hands, 222 00:18:47,520 --> 00:18:50,480 because the skin of it is so different. 223 00:18:50,560 --> 00:18:53,440 And so I knew that it was special. 224 00:18:56,000 --> 00:18:59,840 CARL: In this safe I have unknown meteorites, 225 00:18:59,920 --> 00:19:02,360 they are things that I'm working on currently. 226 00:19:04,080 --> 00:19:05,600 This is from the meteor crater. 227 00:19:05,680 --> 00:19:07,840 This is a Lake Murray meteorite. 228 00:19:09,640 --> 00:19:13,920 This is an iron meteorite that fell in Odessa, Texas. 229 00:19:15,880 --> 00:19:18,760 One day I received a shipment from Jay 230 00:19:18,840 --> 00:19:23,000 and I looked at this very unusual 231 00:19:23,080 --> 00:19:25,600 dark black specimen-- 232 00:19:25,680 --> 00:19:26,720 Black Beauty. 233 00:19:31,000 --> 00:19:32,800 The first thing that I thought was, 234 00:19:32,880 --> 00:19:37,440 this looks so black and shiny, it can't be real. 235 00:19:37,520 --> 00:19:39,720 He told me he thought it had shoe shine polish or that 236 00:19:39,800 --> 00:19:43,560 they polished it up and he really never saw anything like it. 237 00:19:43,640 --> 00:19:46,840 And I said, "Hey, would you look at it, but don't cut into it." 238 00:19:46,920 --> 00:19:49,320 And so I went over to the lab next door 239 00:19:49,400 --> 00:19:52,280 and put it on a diamond saw 240 00:19:52,360 --> 00:19:55,440 and sliced off the first piece of it. 241 00:19:55,520 --> 00:19:56,640 (saw whirring) 242 00:19:58,480 --> 00:20:01,680 I saw immediately that it wasn't something that had been faked-- 243 00:20:01,760 --> 00:20:04,800 That it was actually something quite remarkable. 244 00:20:07,200 --> 00:20:12,920 The analyses were suggestive of a Martian origin. 245 00:20:16,360 --> 00:20:20,680 And it took about a year collaborating with other scientists 246 00:20:20,760 --> 00:20:25,600 to assemble enough evidence that no one could argue with it. 247 00:20:26,840 --> 00:20:29,320 JAY: It is mind boggling to me, 248 00:20:29,400 --> 00:20:32,040 that I can hold a piece of Mars. 249 00:20:34,040 --> 00:20:35,280 (beeping) 250 00:20:44,800 --> 00:20:47,960 NARRATOR: The story of how this Martian rock ended up on Earth 251 00:20:48,040 --> 00:20:49,680 is a remarkable one. 252 00:20:51,320 --> 00:20:53,840 Mars' craters are the clue. 253 00:20:58,520 --> 00:21:01,040 A violent meteorite strike, 254 00:21:03,360 --> 00:21:06,280 punched deep into the planet's surface. 255 00:21:13,560 --> 00:21:16,800 Fusing together ancient rocks, 256 00:21:19,200 --> 00:21:21,360 to form Black Beauty. 257 00:21:26,480 --> 00:21:30,400 Like shrapnel, it was launched into space. 258 00:21:40,000 --> 00:21:43,680 And for millions of years, it wandered the solar system, 259 00:21:44,640 --> 00:21:48,960 until it felt the tug of another planet's gravity. 260 00:21:59,480 --> 00:22:00,720 Safe on Earth, 261 00:22:00,800 --> 00:22:04,120 the secret for Mars' craters could be revealed. 262 00:22:08,400 --> 00:22:11,520 CARL: What we have here is a section of Black Beauty 263 00:22:11,600 --> 00:22:15,920 and from those grains, we're able to determine 264 00:22:16,000 --> 00:22:20,760 a snapshot of geologic time and the geologic history of Mars. 265 00:22:24,680 --> 00:22:26,560 NARRATOR: Hidden in the layers of rock, 266 00:22:26,880 --> 00:22:29,240 Carl discovered something incredible. 267 00:22:31,560 --> 00:22:35,760 CARL: We were astonished because out of Black Beauty was coming 268 00:22:35,840 --> 00:22:37,320 a huge amount of water. 269 00:22:41,120 --> 00:22:44,040 Black Beauty was soaked with Martian water 270 00:22:44,360 --> 00:22:47,080 and remnants of that are still in there. 271 00:22:54,600 --> 00:22:58,000 NARRATOR: So could water really have flowed on this dusty world? 272 00:23:02,960 --> 00:23:06,640 Black Beauty only gives us a tiny, tantalizing hint. 273 00:23:11,920 --> 00:23:16,080 To discover how big a part water played on ancient Mars... 274 00:23:19,440 --> 00:23:23,040 we've had to send probes to the planet itself. 275 00:23:25,240 --> 00:23:28,720 And that's proved a formidable challenge. 276 00:23:34,640 --> 00:23:36,200 (beeping) 277 00:23:45,320 --> 00:23:47,720 As we leave Noachis Terra behind, 278 00:23:49,320 --> 00:23:51,640 and begin the next leg of our journey, 279 00:23:52,440 --> 00:23:55,720 something strange sparkles in the Martian dust. 280 00:23:58,920 --> 00:24:01,600 Mars is kind of a graveyard of spacecraft. 281 00:24:01,680 --> 00:24:04,840 In fact, there's something called the Mars jinx. 282 00:24:04,920 --> 00:24:09,760 Mars has its own plans for whether this is gonna go well, or not. 283 00:24:11,960 --> 00:24:15,680 NARRATOR: The quest to find water and perhaps even life on Mars, 284 00:24:16,160 --> 00:24:18,000 comes at a high cost. 285 00:24:21,000 --> 00:24:26,840 More than half of the 45 missions sent to Mars ended in failure. 286 00:24:30,480 --> 00:24:33,360 AMY: The Soviet Union was the first to start sending missions to Mars 287 00:24:33,440 --> 00:24:35,920 in 1960 and they all failed. 288 00:24:36,000 --> 00:24:39,800 Mars 2, Mars 3, the Mars Zond missions, the Cosmos missions, 289 00:24:39,880 --> 00:24:41,160 the Phobos missions. 290 00:24:41,240 --> 00:24:43,360 The Brits have tried, Europe has tried. 291 00:24:43,440 --> 00:24:46,400 NASA's Mars climate orbiter burned up in the atmosphere, 292 00:24:46,480 --> 00:24:49,880 because of a mix up between metric and imperial units. 293 00:24:50,960 --> 00:24:52,720 (whirring) 294 00:24:54,760 --> 00:24:57,760 It takes so long to get one of these missions 295 00:24:57,840 --> 00:25:00,720 to go from a concept to actual hardware that you fly. 296 00:25:00,800 --> 00:25:05,200 This is somebody's entire career and to see it just pfft. 297 00:25:09,040 --> 00:25:11,800 You're going 13,000 miles an hour 298 00:25:11,880 --> 00:25:15,680 and you have seven minutes to get down to zero miles an hour 299 00:25:15,760 --> 00:25:17,160 and hit the surface gently. 300 00:25:17,240 --> 00:25:18,720 There's enough energy and motion 301 00:25:18,800 --> 00:25:21,840 that it can melt or vaporize the entire spacecraft. 302 00:25:21,920 --> 00:25:22,960 (rumbling) 303 00:25:25,040 --> 00:25:27,080 NAGIN: You can do everything right 304 00:25:27,160 --> 00:25:29,600 and you can still have a bad day on Mars. 305 00:25:31,480 --> 00:25:34,000 NARRATOR: Even if you can make it through the atmosphere... 306 00:25:36,160 --> 00:25:38,040 (explosion) 307 00:25:39,760 --> 00:25:42,440 ...landing is a whole new challenge. 308 00:25:43,680 --> 00:25:45,160 ABIGAIL: It's nerve-racking 309 00:25:45,240 --> 00:25:49,320 but, man, does it make it so exhilarating when it works. 310 00:25:52,880 --> 00:25:54,880 NARRATOR: And some really do work. 311 00:25:58,000 --> 00:26:00,440 One that made it to the surface, 312 00:26:00,520 --> 00:26:03,960 became arguably the most successful mission ever. 313 00:26:07,480 --> 00:26:10,960 Thanks to a mysterious alien force. 314 00:26:13,960 --> 00:26:15,160 (beeping) 315 00:26:20,480 --> 00:26:24,840 NARRATOR: The longest running rover that has ever explored Mars 316 00:26:24,920 --> 00:26:27,120 can be found at our next destination. 317 00:26:32,000 --> 00:26:35,120 The sandy plains of Meridiani Planum. 318 00:26:40,600 --> 00:26:44,120 Still sitting here today is the lifeless shell 319 00:26:45,400 --> 00:26:47,840 of NASA's Opportunity rover. 320 00:26:54,320 --> 00:26:57,600 Expected to operate for 90 days, 321 00:26:59,680 --> 00:27:02,760 it lasted 14 and a half years, 322 00:27:04,280 --> 00:27:09,320 making a discovery that transformed our understanding of Mars. 323 00:27:16,720 --> 00:27:20,560 And the key to its marathon mission was a mysterious force, 324 00:27:21,720 --> 00:27:25,000 that leaves these strange patterns in the sand. 325 00:27:28,040 --> 00:27:29,200 (beeping) 326 00:27:30,200 --> 00:27:33,520 MAN (over radio): Three, two, main engines start, 327 00:27:33,600 --> 00:27:38,400 zero and lift off of the Delta Rocket with Opportunity. 328 00:27:40,080 --> 00:27:42,960 NARRATOR: Opportunity's mission was to hunt for evidence 329 00:27:43,040 --> 00:27:45,040 of ancient water on Mars. 330 00:27:47,680 --> 00:27:52,240 But first, it had to land where so many others had failed. 331 00:27:56,160 --> 00:27:58,680 CALLAS: Landing on Mars is very difficult. 332 00:27:58,760 --> 00:28:02,280 And so in those tense moments, either during the launch phase 333 00:28:02,360 --> 00:28:05,240 or you know, the arrival and entry descent into landing, 334 00:28:05,680 --> 00:28:07,600 you're on the edge of your seat, 335 00:28:07,680 --> 00:28:11,040 waiting to hear word on whether you are successful 336 00:28:11,120 --> 00:28:12,560 or whether it's a failure. 337 00:28:15,600 --> 00:28:19,440 (instrumental music playing) 338 00:28:37,480 --> 00:28:38,840 NARRATOR: To protect their rover, 339 00:28:39,720 --> 00:28:42,800 the engineers came up with a plan as bizarre 340 00:28:42,880 --> 00:28:44,480 as it was audacious. 341 00:28:44,560 --> 00:28:46,160 MAN (over radio): Suspected retro rock and ignition on my mark. 342 00:28:46,240 --> 00:28:47,200 Mark. 343 00:28:57,720 --> 00:28:59,240 NARRATOR: Shock absorbers... 344 00:29:00,040 --> 00:29:02,560 MAN (over radio): At this point in time, we should be on the ground. 345 00:29:02,640 --> 00:29:03,960 NARRATOR: Space style. 346 00:29:21,360 --> 00:29:24,040 CALLAS: When you think about half a billion-dollar spacecraft 347 00:29:24,120 --> 00:29:26,240 inside this gigantic beach ball 348 00:29:26,320 --> 00:29:29,000 bouncing around on the surface of Mars, 349 00:29:29,080 --> 00:29:31,680 it goes into the category of "what were they thinking?" 350 00:29:33,120 --> 00:29:34,760 (instrumental music playing) 351 00:30:06,400 --> 00:30:09,360 NARRATOR: Opportunity was safe on the ground. 352 00:30:09,720 --> 00:30:12,760 Now it began using its state of the art camera... 353 00:30:12,840 --> 00:30:13,800 (cheering) 354 00:30:13,880 --> 00:30:18,760 ...to capture the most detailed images of the Martian surface ever seen. 355 00:30:25,320 --> 00:30:28,560 JAMES: When we landed and we saw the first view 356 00:30:29,800 --> 00:30:32,520 it's like, seeing King Tut's tomb. 357 00:30:32,600 --> 00:30:34,960 There's the story we've been waiting for. 358 00:30:35,040 --> 00:30:40,080 I remember crying and saying, "This is exploration." 359 00:30:47,560 --> 00:30:51,320 Opportunity is turning our camera back on this tiny little shallow crater 360 00:30:51,400 --> 00:30:53,960 and looking at the deflated airbags. 361 00:30:56,640 --> 00:30:59,200 ABIGAIL: Opportunity was able to leave the pad 362 00:31:01,720 --> 00:31:03,800 and become a real rover. 363 00:31:21,280 --> 00:31:23,800 NARRATOR: Opportunity showed us icy clouds 364 00:31:23,880 --> 00:31:26,320 dancing across an alien sky. 365 00:31:29,840 --> 00:31:32,960 Even the other worldly setting of our shared sun. 366 00:31:39,480 --> 00:31:42,920 Opportunity's discoveries were truly breathtaking. 367 00:31:43,240 --> 00:31:44,920 Everyone wanted to see more. 368 00:31:47,480 --> 00:31:49,400 But the clock was ticking. 369 00:31:54,640 --> 00:31:56,880 CALLAS: I knew then end would come at some point. 370 00:32:00,360 --> 00:32:03,440 It's much like you have an aging parent. 371 00:32:04,000 --> 00:32:05,560 Maybe they're in good health. 372 00:32:05,640 --> 00:32:08,400 But you know that they're not gonna last forever. 373 00:32:11,400 --> 00:32:12,760 Every day was precious. 374 00:32:14,600 --> 00:32:18,320 We thought we had a finite amount of time to get our job done. 375 00:32:19,960 --> 00:32:23,000 And it comes down to the fact that the rovers are solar powered. 376 00:32:25,000 --> 00:32:27,360 We knew that Mars is a dusty place 377 00:32:27,440 --> 00:32:30,080 and that the dust falls out of the atmosphere. 378 00:32:31,480 --> 00:32:35,160 So we figured the rovers would have enough time to last 379 00:32:35,240 --> 00:32:39,000 90 days before the solar rays were so dusty 380 00:32:39,080 --> 00:32:40,960 that they couldn't generate enough energy. 381 00:32:44,880 --> 00:32:47,520 But Mars and the rovers proved us wrong. 382 00:32:54,080 --> 00:32:55,320 (wind howling) 383 00:32:56,840 --> 00:33:01,280 NARRATOR: The Martian dust did make Opportunity's battery levels run down. 384 00:33:01,360 --> 00:33:04,240 But then they would miraculously bounce back up. 385 00:33:07,400 --> 00:33:09,920 The rovers engineers were perplexed. 386 00:33:10,880 --> 00:33:14,480 But some astonishing images would provide the answer. 387 00:33:23,760 --> 00:33:28,040 NARRATOR: As the Martian dust settled on NASA's solar powered rover, 388 00:33:30,560 --> 00:33:33,960 the engineers were puzzled at how it kept going. 389 00:33:35,400 --> 00:33:39,040 Then the received some extraordinary images. 390 00:33:52,480 --> 00:33:56,120 We have actually a series of time lapse photographs 391 00:33:56,200 --> 00:33:58,520 of the plains of Mars, 392 00:33:58,600 --> 00:34:02,040 in which we captured a series of dust devils moving across. 393 00:34:03,200 --> 00:34:06,000 And we think it's something like that 394 00:34:06,680 --> 00:34:08,680 that cleaned the dust off the rover. 395 00:34:17,240 --> 00:34:20,840 NARRATOR: As these dust devils move across the landscape, 396 00:34:25,440 --> 00:34:29,400 spiraling up to twelve miles into the sky, 397 00:34:35,480 --> 00:34:38,560 they leave tell tail tracks behind them. 398 00:34:42,400 --> 00:34:46,600 The mysterious patterns that we can see with HiRISE. 399 00:34:50,240 --> 00:34:52,680 Incredibly it was Martian weather 400 00:34:52,760 --> 00:34:56,160 that allowed Opportunity to explore Mars for so long. 401 00:35:01,520 --> 00:35:06,560 But in July 2018, a global dust storm hit the planet. 402 00:35:07,560 --> 00:35:10,800 CALLAS: The skies were so dark that you couldn't see the sun. 403 00:35:10,880 --> 00:35:14,920 The rover got too cold and something broke inside. 404 00:35:15,800 --> 00:35:17,680 We never heard from the rover again. 405 00:35:19,360 --> 00:35:21,320 It's sad. It's emotional. 406 00:35:22,640 --> 00:35:26,520 But to have fourteen and a half years was such a gift. 407 00:35:30,000 --> 00:35:33,040 NARRATOR: Over its mission Opportunity sent back over 408 00:35:33,120 --> 00:35:35,320 200,000 images. 409 00:35:36,280 --> 00:35:39,040 Revealing a Mars we had never seen before 410 00:35:40,040 --> 00:35:43,480 and confirming something extraordinary. 411 00:35:52,360 --> 00:35:55,600 DERRICK: We can clearly see these wonderful layers of rock. 412 00:35:55,680 --> 00:35:58,840 Sedimentary layers are always laid down in water. 413 00:36:02,720 --> 00:36:05,360 NINA: We call these Blueberries because when we first saw them 414 00:36:05,440 --> 00:36:07,800 we thought they looked like blueberries in a muffin. 415 00:36:09,480 --> 00:36:11,600 DAVID: They were formed out of haematite. 416 00:36:11,680 --> 00:36:14,480 They seem to be telling us of a time when there was 417 00:36:14,560 --> 00:36:19,200 highly acidic water flowing through and over the ground of Mars. 418 00:36:21,840 --> 00:36:24,560 NINA: This is a vein of the mineral, gypsum. 419 00:36:25,080 --> 00:36:27,040 Has a lot of calcium and Sulphur in it. 420 00:36:27,120 --> 00:36:29,720 And it only forms by evaporating water. 421 00:36:29,800 --> 00:36:33,200 It's a mineral that has water chemically bound inside. 422 00:36:36,760 --> 00:36:39,560 This was the smoking gun. We have it. 423 00:36:39,640 --> 00:36:42,440 Water was here and we found it. 424 00:36:52,320 --> 00:36:55,120 NARRATOR: The Black beauty meteorite revealed moisture 425 00:36:55,200 --> 00:36:57,160 in an ancient Martian rock. 426 00:37:01,360 --> 00:37:04,880 And Opportunity showed there were once pools of water 427 00:37:04,960 --> 00:37:06,000 on the planet's surface. 428 00:37:12,920 --> 00:37:16,920 Our next stop is one of the most intriguing features on the planet. 429 00:37:18,560 --> 00:37:22,840 It will reveal just how different ancient Mars must have been. 430 00:37:25,240 --> 00:37:26,520 (beeping) 431 00:37:31,320 --> 00:37:35,240 1,600 miles from the final resting place 432 00:37:35,320 --> 00:37:36,960 of NASA's Opportunity Rover, 433 00:37:39,360 --> 00:37:44,040 is a chasm so huge that it's visible from space... 434 00:37:46,800 --> 00:37:48,240 Nirgal Vallis. 435 00:37:49,000 --> 00:37:53,440 A clue to Mars' former life etched into the rock. 436 00:37:55,800 --> 00:37:58,840 DAVID: It's about 300 miles long. 437 00:37:58,920 --> 00:38:01,960 It's narrower on one end and wider on the other. 438 00:38:02,040 --> 00:38:06,360 We can see these long channels, like a tree, 439 00:38:06,440 --> 00:38:09,000 all connected to a single trunk. 440 00:38:10,080 --> 00:38:14,200 MELISSA: And these patterns they seem to start out of nowhere. 441 00:38:14,280 --> 00:38:16,480 And then they get deeper and deeper as they go along. 442 00:38:16,560 --> 00:38:18,320 And they connect together. 443 00:38:19,240 --> 00:38:23,760 NINA: As planetary geologists we're studying the surface of the planet. 444 00:38:24,320 --> 00:38:28,440 Like detectives trying to understand the history of a planet. 445 00:38:28,520 --> 00:38:30,840 And how it came to be the way that it is today. 446 00:38:32,600 --> 00:38:35,440 NARRATOR: Only one substance has the power to change 447 00:38:35,520 --> 00:38:38,000 entire landscapes in this dramatic way. 448 00:38:57,400 --> 00:38:59,760 KRISTEN: Water has a huge effect. 449 00:39:01,400 --> 00:39:05,200 Chemically it slowly dissolves different components of the rock. 450 00:39:06,160 --> 00:39:10,000 But geomorphically it can just do tons of work. 451 00:39:11,800 --> 00:39:15,880 Water can move rock in incredibly fast ways. 452 00:39:16,880 --> 00:39:19,280 And actually shift entire landscapes. 453 00:39:21,680 --> 00:39:26,000 It leaves a print so you can see these beautiful canyons 454 00:39:26,080 --> 00:39:28,040 carved out by rivers. 455 00:39:29,960 --> 00:39:33,560 NARRATOR: Nirgal Vallis reveals that ancient Mars 456 00:39:33,640 --> 00:39:36,000 was awash with water. 457 00:39:36,080 --> 00:39:38,080 MELISSA: We're not talking about just a trickle of water. 458 00:39:38,160 --> 00:39:40,440 We're talking about full rivers. 459 00:39:40,520 --> 00:39:43,160 Full to their banks, flowing water. 460 00:39:43,240 --> 00:39:44,480 There were oceans. 461 00:39:44,560 --> 00:39:45,760 There were clouds in the sky. 462 00:39:45,840 --> 00:39:46,960 There were rain storms. 463 00:39:47,040 --> 00:39:48,920 There were floods across the surface. 464 00:39:49,000 --> 00:39:50,760 MELISSA: We're talking huge volumes of water 465 00:39:50,840 --> 00:39:53,120 and a whole cycle of water. 466 00:39:53,200 --> 00:39:54,440 Precipitation. 467 00:39:54,520 --> 00:39:57,040 Maybe snowfall on the tops of mountains. 468 00:39:57,920 --> 00:39:59,400 (beeping) 469 00:40:12,840 --> 00:40:15,920 NARRATOR: To cut Nirgal Vallis into the landscape, 470 00:40:16,000 --> 00:40:18,560 would have taken a raging torrent. 471 00:40:32,760 --> 00:40:37,000 A river one and a half times the size of the Nile. 472 00:40:44,280 --> 00:40:49,120 Carrying 4,800 cubic meters of water 473 00:40:49,480 --> 00:40:50,880 every second. 474 00:41:19,240 --> 00:41:21,360 DERRICK: You know Percival Lowell might not have been 475 00:41:21,440 --> 00:41:23,040 that wrong after all. 476 00:41:23,600 --> 00:41:27,040 Although he might have been off by four billion years or so. 477 00:41:28,080 --> 00:41:31,120 But it looks like Mars is a much more intriguing planet 478 00:41:31,200 --> 00:41:32,720 than ever through before. 479 00:41:37,800 --> 00:41:40,120 NARRATOR: But if Mars once looked like this, 480 00:41:44,200 --> 00:41:46,160 where did all the water go? 481 00:41:52,560 --> 00:41:54,120 (beeping) 482 00:41:58,360 --> 00:42:01,200 NARRATOR: Eight hundred miles west of Nirgal Vallis 483 00:42:02,520 --> 00:42:05,360 lie a pair of colossal features 484 00:42:05,440 --> 00:42:07,560 the most spectacular on the planet. 485 00:42:08,080 --> 00:42:11,600 They helped solve the mystery of Mars' missing water. 486 00:42:13,320 --> 00:42:16,760 The first, a gigantic cut 487 00:42:16,840 --> 00:42:20,080 running a fifth of the way around the entire plant... 488 00:42:20,760 --> 00:42:23,200 Valles Marineris. 489 00:42:24,480 --> 00:42:27,760 MICHIO: It is about the size of the United States of America. 490 00:42:28,360 --> 00:42:33,280 It would extend from Los Angeles all the way out to New York City. 491 00:42:33,360 --> 00:42:34,920 It's six miles deep. 492 00:42:35,000 --> 00:42:36,840 It's 150 miles wide. 493 00:42:36,920 --> 00:42:39,440 If you stood on one end you couldn't see the other end 494 00:42:39,520 --> 00:42:42,080 because the planet itself would curve away from you. 495 00:42:42,160 --> 00:42:45,880 It's just incomprehensible how big this thing is. 496 00:42:45,960 --> 00:42:48,840 It's the longest canyon in the solar system. 497 00:42:48,920 --> 00:42:50,920 It's the big daddy. 498 00:42:53,560 --> 00:42:58,600 NARRATOR: Just over the horizon a feature so enormous 499 00:42:59,960 --> 00:43:01,640 it looks unreal... 500 00:43:03,400 --> 00:43:05,320 Olympus Mons. 501 00:43:06,000 --> 00:43:09,320 ADAM: It's the biggest mountain in our solar system. 502 00:43:09,400 --> 00:43:12,040 It's hard not to go there. Right? That's pretty cool. 503 00:43:12,120 --> 00:43:15,200 It rises literally out of the atmosphere. 504 00:43:15,680 --> 00:43:19,800 DERRICK: This volcano was two and a half times as tall as Mount Everest. 505 00:43:19,880 --> 00:43:23,000 JAMES: Rising nearly 90,000 feet above its base. 506 00:43:26,360 --> 00:43:29,440 DERRICK: Since the gravity on Mars is just one third that of Earth, 507 00:43:29,520 --> 00:43:32,800 there's much less gravitational force holding things down. 508 00:43:32,880 --> 00:43:36,080 And this is why Olympus Mons dwarfs anything on the Earth. 509 00:43:37,840 --> 00:43:40,360 NINA: If you were to look at Olympus Mons from the side, 510 00:43:40,440 --> 00:43:42,760 just you know if you were flying past Mars, 511 00:43:42,840 --> 00:43:45,120 you could actually see the bump 512 00:43:45,200 --> 00:43:47,440 above the curvature of the planet. 513 00:43:47,520 --> 00:43:48,600 That's how big it is. 514 00:43:51,960 --> 00:43:55,040 NARRATOR: Both Olympus Mons and Valles Marineris 515 00:43:55,120 --> 00:44:00,240 are giant relics of an epic chapter in Mars' history. 516 00:44:04,600 --> 00:44:08,320 They hold the story of how Mars once lived. 517 00:44:08,720 --> 00:44:10,400 And why it died. 518 00:44:14,400 --> 00:44:15,480 (beeping) 519 00:44:24,120 --> 00:44:28,560 In Mars' infancy, raging volcanoes... 520 00:44:31,440 --> 00:44:35,320 ejected a staggering billion, billion tons 521 00:44:35,400 --> 00:44:38,520 of molten rock from its interior. 522 00:44:54,360 --> 00:44:57,720 This lava formed a vast plateau 523 00:44:57,800 --> 00:45:01,360 that stretched over 3,000 miles. 524 00:45:07,840 --> 00:45:10,600 The colossal mass of this new rock 525 00:45:10,680 --> 00:45:13,840 put huge stress on the surrounding crust. 526 00:45:24,440 --> 00:45:27,680 Literally tearing the planet apart. 527 00:45:43,720 --> 00:45:46,280 Valles Marineris was born. 528 00:45:56,920 --> 00:45:59,000 But with the violence of early Mars... 529 00:46:00,720 --> 00:46:02,160 ...came creation. 530 00:46:04,560 --> 00:46:07,520 MELISSA: When volcano's erupted on ancient Mars 531 00:46:07,600 --> 00:46:11,400 they released all sorts of gases that made up the Martian atmosphere. 532 00:46:12,760 --> 00:46:14,080 DAVID: Carbon dioxide. 533 00:46:14,160 --> 00:46:15,920 Sulphur dioxide. 534 00:46:16,000 --> 00:46:18,160 Methane. Water vapor. 535 00:46:18,240 --> 00:46:21,680 This contributes to creating a thicker atmosphere. 536 00:46:21,760 --> 00:46:24,080 And once you have a thicker atmosphere 537 00:46:24,160 --> 00:46:26,520 then you can have water existing on a surface. 538 00:46:28,320 --> 00:46:30,640 MELISSA: There has to be enough atmospheric pressure 539 00:46:30,720 --> 00:46:32,840 to keep water in a liquid state. 540 00:46:33,360 --> 00:46:36,800 Otherwise water goes directly from a solid as ice, 541 00:46:36,880 --> 00:46:38,000 into a vapor. 542 00:46:38,080 --> 00:46:40,120 Having enough atmospheric pressure 543 00:46:40,200 --> 00:46:43,240 is crucial to having running water on a surface. 544 00:46:49,040 --> 00:46:52,280 NARRATOR: But Mars' atmosphere wasn't to last. 545 00:46:54,760 --> 00:46:57,200 And the story of how it disappeared 546 00:46:58,720 --> 00:47:01,880 holds a terrible warning for us on Earth. 547 00:47:11,200 --> 00:47:13,800 Our planet is protected by a force field. 548 00:47:15,960 --> 00:47:19,200 It extends 40,000 miles into space. 549 00:47:22,000 --> 00:47:23,760 But it's generated, 550 00:47:30,560 --> 00:47:32,360 at Earth's very core. 551 00:47:38,560 --> 00:47:41,520 DERRICK: It's really kinda terrifying if you think about it. 552 00:47:41,880 --> 00:47:45,160 We stand on a very thin skin that encloses 553 00:47:45,240 --> 00:47:47,920 essentially a molten ball of iron. 554 00:47:48,920 --> 00:47:51,880 NINA: This ball of iron that is moving 555 00:47:51,960 --> 00:47:54,960 at a slightly different rate than the rest of the Earth. 556 00:47:55,040 --> 00:47:57,080 It's kind of sloshing around in there. 557 00:47:57,160 --> 00:47:59,120 That creates a magnetic field. 558 00:47:59,200 --> 00:48:02,400 That extends tens of thousands of miles out into space. 559 00:48:09,360 --> 00:48:12,320 NARRATOR: The Aurora in our night sky 560 00:48:12,400 --> 00:48:16,080 is much more than a pretty light show. 561 00:48:20,800 --> 00:48:25,160 You are perceiving directly Earth's magnetic field. 562 00:48:25,240 --> 00:48:27,960 It's a manifestation of this magnetic field. 563 00:48:30,840 --> 00:48:32,920 DERRICK: Charged particles from the sun 564 00:48:33,000 --> 00:48:36,360 travel through the solar system at supersonic speeds, 565 00:48:36,440 --> 00:48:38,560 impacting the atmosphere of the Earth. 566 00:48:38,640 --> 00:48:42,480 If we didn't have the magnetic field to deflect those around the Earth, 567 00:48:42,560 --> 00:48:44,120 it would just slowly strip away 568 00:48:44,200 --> 00:48:45,960 all the pieces of our atmosphere over time. 569 00:48:49,520 --> 00:48:50,760 GRUNSFELD: The atmosphere, you know, 570 00:48:50,840 --> 00:48:52,960 is just this tiny thin blue line. 571 00:48:54,160 --> 00:48:55,400 Barely big enough to see. 572 00:48:56,360 --> 00:48:59,280 And everything that lives on Earth 573 00:48:59,640 --> 00:49:02,040 is dependent on that thin blue line. 574 00:49:02,120 --> 00:49:05,160 It really makes you think how fragile our existence is. 575 00:49:08,400 --> 00:49:09,880 NARRATOR: In the deep past 576 00:49:09,960 --> 00:49:13,200 an Aurora also danced across Martian skies. 577 00:49:15,520 --> 00:49:19,440 But Mars couldn't hold on to its precious force field. 578 00:49:20,120 --> 00:49:22,120 About four billion years ago, 579 00:49:23,000 --> 00:49:25,640 a terrible chain reaction began. 580 00:49:35,320 --> 00:49:39,080 NARRATOR: Just like Earth, ancient Mars' magnetic shield 581 00:49:39,160 --> 00:49:41,080 protected its atmosphere 582 00:49:44,840 --> 00:49:47,760 and allowed water to exist on its surface. 583 00:49:51,920 --> 00:49:53,520 But it wasn't to last. 584 00:49:55,840 --> 00:49:58,520 MELISSA: The smaller you are the faster you lose heat. 585 00:49:58,600 --> 00:49:59,760 It's simple physics. 586 00:50:01,720 --> 00:50:04,600 DAVID: Think of if you take a bunch a bunch of potatoes 587 00:50:04,680 --> 00:50:05,840 out of the oven. 588 00:50:05,920 --> 00:50:10,280 The tiny little mini potatoes will cool off very quickly. 589 00:50:10,360 --> 00:50:12,880 And the large ones will take much longer. 590 00:50:12,960 --> 00:50:15,600 Mars being half the size of Earth, 591 00:50:15,680 --> 00:50:19,320 lost its heat faster than Earth has lost its heat. 592 00:50:19,400 --> 00:50:22,120 As the planet cools the churning and the interior 593 00:50:22,200 --> 00:50:24,320 starts to slow down and stop. 594 00:50:28,760 --> 00:50:31,800 NARRATOR: Mars started to die from the inside out. 595 00:50:33,840 --> 00:50:36,960 The protective force field began to falter. 596 00:50:39,520 --> 00:50:42,320 The solar winds stripped away the atmosphere. 597 00:50:46,840 --> 00:50:48,760 Volcanoes fell silent. 598 00:50:52,760 --> 00:50:55,480 Gases no longer replenished the skies. 599 00:51:00,640 --> 00:51:04,560 The planet's water evaporated into space... 600 00:51:11,680 --> 00:51:12,960 killing Mars. 601 00:51:15,120 --> 00:51:17,320 (beeping) 602 00:51:24,080 --> 00:51:27,960 Today there are only two places on Mars' surface 603 00:51:28,040 --> 00:51:30,360 where water can still be found. 604 00:51:31,920 --> 00:51:34,120 They're the next stops on our journey. 605 00:51:35,960 --> 00:51:40,000 The planet's most spectacular and alien landscapes. 606 00:51:41,040 --> 00:51:43,400 Its poles. 607 00:51:44,920 --> 00:51:46,480 Mars has two polar caps 608 00:51:46,560 --> 00:51:48,920 and each has their own distinct personality. 609 00:51:52,200 --> 00:51:56,880 The Mars North Pole is like this beautiful 610 00:51:57,360 --> 00:52:00,640 hockey puck of ice about the size of Greenland. 611 00:52:02,240 --> 00:52:06,000 It's 600 miles wide and 1.2 miles deep. 612 00:52:08,000 --> 00:52:09,960 TANYA: The northern polar cap of Mars 613 00:52:10,040 --> 00:52:11,360 has these amazing dune fields. 614 00:52:12,120 --> 00:52:16,320 And these striking cliffs that skirt along the outside. 615 00:52:17,080 --> 00:52:19,960 We've even spotted avalanches in progress. 616 00:52:28,800 --> 00:52:30,840 NARRATOR: At the other end of the planet, 617 00:52:31,960 --> 00:52:34,400 the landscapes are even more breathtaking. 618 00:52:35,720 --> 00:52:39,480 The south polar cap is over two miles thick. 619 00:52:39,560 --> 00:52:40,520 That's a lot of ice. 620 00:52:42,800 --> 00:52:44,680 MELISSA: The polar cap forms these incredible 621 00:52:44,760 --> 00:52:48,240 swirling patterns in whites and oranges and reds. 622 00:52:48,320 --> 00:52:51,480 It reminds me of orange sherbet or a dreamsicle. 623 00:52:52,840 --> 00:52:55,920 TANYA: There are these bizarre kaleidoscopic patterns. 624 00:52:59,800 --> 00:53:02,800 JAMES: Areas where some of the landscape has disappeared, 625 00:53:02,880 --> 00:53:04,200 the holes. 626 00:53:04,280 --> 00:53:06,560 Other places where it's built up as rings. 627 00:53:07,560 --> 00:53:09,280 It almost defies words. 628 00:53:09,360 --> 00:53:12,120 It's Ansell Adam-esqe but not terrestrial. 629 00:53:14,160 --> 00:53:16,680 NARRATOR: Some volatile force must have shaped this 630 00:53:16,760 --> 00:53:18,480 fantastical terrain. 631 00:53:20,120 --> 00:53:21,800 But it can't be the water. 632 00:53:23,720 --> 00:53:27,800 It's so cold here that it remains eternally frozen... 633 00:53:28,320 --> 00:53:30,000 like concrete. 634 00:53:30,880 --> 00:53:32,040 So what is it? 635 00:53:33,120 --> 00:53:35,760 The answer lies at the edge of the ice cap. 636 00:53:39,320 --> 00:53:41,840 And its revealed by HiRISE. 637 00:53:42,680 --> 00:53:44,880 NINA: We can see here that these are really 638 00:53:44,960 --> 00:53:49,840 strange little starburst features that radiate out from the center. 639 00:53:52,600 --> 00:53:55,480 And so for obvious reasons we call them spiders. 640 00:54:02,280 --> 00:54:04,080 NINA: It turns out that Mars has seasons 641 00:54:04,160 --> 00:54:05,680 just like the Earth does. 642 00:54:07,120 --> 00:54:10,720 So as winter approaches in the southern hemisphere of Mars, 643 00:54:11,120 --> 00:54:13,480 the temperature basically plummets. 644 00:54:13,560 --> 00:54:17,040 We get things like frost and snow. But with a difference. 645 00:54:32,360 --> 00:54:34,280 This isn't water snow. 646 00:54:34,360 --> 00:54:38,040 It's actually snow made out of carbon dioxide or dry ice. 647 00:54:40,720 --> 00:54:41,920 It's alien yeah. 648 00:54:42,000 --> 00:54:43,720 I mean we don't see anything like that on Earth. 649 00:54:45,800 --> 00:54:47,400 NARRATOR: For the duration of winter 650 00:54:47,480 --> 00:54:52,040 temperatures never climb above minus 190 degrees Fahrenheit. 651 00:54:54,000 --> 00:54:55,960 The entire polar region, 652 00:54:56,040 --> 00:54:59,760 water ice cap, and surrounding planes 653 00:54:59,840 --> 00:55:03,960 is covered in a thick layer of dry ice. 654 00:55:04,760 --> 00:55:06,200 But as the spring comes, 655 00:55:06,280 --> 00:55:08,160 things start getting a little bit interesting. 656 00:55:15,960 --> 00:55:18,640 As the sun returns the dry ice begins to melt. 657 00:55:18,720 --> 00:55:20,600 But it doesn't form a liquid. 658 00:55:20,680 --> 00:55:22,040 It actually goes straight to gas. 659 00:55:23,600 --> 00:55:26,480 So you start building up pressure because you're making more gas, 660 00:55:26,560 --> 00:55:29,440 but trapping it inside of this ice layer. 661 00:55:29,520 --> 00:55:32,480 And so you're building up, building up, building up pressure 662 00:55:32,560 --> 00:55:35,840 until that one point where the pressure just increases so much 663 00:55:35,920 --> 00:55:37,760 that it just explodes. 664 00:55:45,120 --> 00:55:48,360 And that aftermath of that explosion are these dark streaks 665 00:55:48,440 --> 00:55:50,600 that we see on HiRISE images. 666 00:55:54,720 --> 00:55:59,720 NARRATOR: Carved into the surface by exploding jets of carbon dioxide, 667 00:56:02,080 --> 00:56:05,600 each one of these strange spider formations 668 00:56:06,640 --> 00:56:09,200 took 10,000 years to form. 669 00:56:16,000 --> 00:56:20,240 And it's the same force, carbon dioxide, 670 00:56:21,040 --> 00:56:24,720 changing from gas to dry ice to gas 671 00:56:25,600 --> 00:56:27,400 that makes Mars' poles 672 00:56:28,440 --> 00:56:30,360 so beautiful and bizarre. 673 00:56:32,400 --> 00:56:35,080 They're both completely alien landscapes. 674 00:56:35,160 --> 00:56:37,160 And it's quintessential Mars. 675 00:56:37,240 --> 00:56:39,280 It's alien Mars. 676 00:56:43,520 --> 00:56:45,600 NARRATOR: Exploding poles. 677 00:56:48,560 --> 00:56:51,080 Scarred frozen planes. 678 00:56:53,400 --> 00:56:56,360 A planet stripped of its atmosphere 679 00:56:56,440 --> 00:56:58,400 and blasted by solar winds. 680 00:57:00,360 --> 00:57:05,000 The idea that Mars could ever support life might seem hopeless. 681 00:57:10,320 --> 00:57:13,520 But we now know that billions of years ago, 682 00:57:14,440 --> 00:57:16,880 when the first life forms appeared on Earth, 683 00:57:19,640 --> 00:57:22,480 the two planets were much more alike. 684 00:57:26,000 --> 00:57:28,680 And if life emerged on our world, 685 00:57:29,040 --> 00:57:30,880 why not here? 686 00:57:35,200 --> 00:57:36,840 (beeping) 687 00:57:42,680 --> 00:57:44,560 NARRATOR: As afternoon turns to evening, 688 00:57:44,960 --> 00:57:47,360 we head towards the Marian Equator. 689 00:57:48,800 --> 00:57:51,440 To a place where since 2012, 690 00:57:52,160 --> 00:57:55,240 NASA has been on an audacious mission. 691 00:57:56,680 --> 00:57:59,160 In Gale Crater right now, 692 00:57:59,240 --> 00:58:04,120 a high-tech Rover is hunting for the very ingredients of life. 693 00:58:07,760 --> 00:58:09,200 -MAN (indistinct over PA) - (cheering) 694 00:58:11,240 --> 00:58:12,920 ASHWIN: The night that we landed 695 00:58:13,000 --> 00:58:15,640 I saw my engineering colleagues across the room, 696 00:58:15,720 --> 00:58:17,400 jump up and down in their chairs. 697 00:58:17,480 --> 00:58:19,360 And you know some of them begin to cry. 698 00:58:19,440 --> 00:58:22,480 And for me of course, I felt all those same emotions. 699 00:58:22,560 --> 00:58:24,920 But then it, all of a sudden it hit me that now there gonna 700 00:58:25,000 --> 00:58:28,280 give us the car keys and it's really up to us as scientists 701 00:58:28,360 --> 00:58:30,560 to fulfill the promise of the whole mission. 702 00:58:34,400 --> 00:58:36,880 NARRATOR: Three and a half billion years ago 703 00:58:36,960 --> 00:58:39,640 Gale Crater was filled with water. 704 00:58:42,640 --> 00:58:45,040 Today it's a dried-up lake bed. 705 00:58:47,000 --> 00:58:49,240 But it conceals clues 706 00:58:49,320 --> 00:58:52,440 to just how habitable Mars might have once been. 707 00:58:58,760 --> 00:59:03,720 Combing its surface is a one ton mobile science lab. 708 00:59:07,920 --> 00:59:10,720 The only Rover at work on Mars today... 709 00:59:12,040 --> 00:59:14,560 NASA's Curiosity. 710 00:59:22,720 --> 00:59:24,640 DIANA: Curiosity's an incredible rover. 711 00:59:24,720 --> 00:59:28,320 It is an SUV size, laser beam eye robot 712 00:59:28,400 --> 00:59:32,320 that is going around Mars, trying to figure out 713 00:59:32,400 --> 00:59:35,560 if there was the environment to sustain life at some point. 714 00:59:35,640 --> 00:59:37,880 When I describe it that way it just sounds like 715 00:59:37,960 --> 00:59:40,920 I am talking about science fiction. 716 00:59:44,280 --> 00:59:47,040 MELISSA: Curiosity is a huge beast of a rover. 717 00:59:47,120 --> 00:59:50,320 Six-wheel drive, stands seven feet tall. 718 00:59:52,160 --> 00:59:57,520 She's powered by plutonium that gives her a quantum energy source. 719 00:59:57,600 --> 00:59:59,840 She can run for years. 720 01:00:00,800 --> 01:00:04,920 Dust storms that kill rovers don't touch Curiosity. 721 01:00:12,240 --> 01:00:14,040 GRUNSFELD: Curiosity is so big 722 01:00:14,120 --> 01:00:17,760 that we can see it with HiRISE in great detail. 723 01:00:19,320 --> 01:00:21,080 We can see the body, we can see the wheels, 724 01:00:21,160 --> 01:00:22,920 we can see the wheel tracks. 725 01:00:28,000 --> 01:00:30,560 NARRATOR: Alongside its serious science kit, 726 01:00:31,560 --> 01:00:35,360 Curiosity has no fewer than 17 cameras. 727 01:00:38,320 --> 01:00:40,600 It can even take selfies. 728 01:00:41,240 --> 01:00:42,720 ASHWIN: We designed these rovers 729 01:00:42,800 --> 01:00:45,680 to act like our human surrogates on Mars. 730 01:00:46,680 --> 01:00:49,560 They have eyes that are about six feet off the ground 731 01:00:51,560 --> 01:00:55,360 and they take color pictures that have the same wavelengths as our human eyes. 732 01:00:56,480 --> 01:00:59,800 All this is designed to put a human virtual presence on Mars. 733 01:01:00,720 --> 01:01:06,000 NARRATOR: Using half a million images taken by Curiosity and Mars' orbiter's 734 01:01:08,320 --> 01:01:11,280 NASA has rebuilt Gale Crater... 735 01:01:15,520 --> 01:01:16,720 on earth. 736 01:01:18,120 --> 01:01:21,320 DAWN: I feel like I have been on the surface of Mars. 737 01:01:22,320 --> 01:01:25,400 The images and the topography 738 01:01:25,480 --> 01:01:29,520 fills your mind and you get lost in this virtual world. 739 01:01:30,720 --> 01:01:35,280 It's just so interesting to actually use data 740 01:01:35,760 --> 01:01:38,840 to transport yourself into another environment, 741 01:01:38,920 --> 01:01:40,240 onto another planet. 742 01:01:42,240 --> 01:01:43,840 NARRATOR: But this isn't just for fun. 743 01:01:46,000 --> 01:01:48,800 Curiosity is far more than a mobile camera. 744 01:01:50,560 --> 01:01:52,720 Dawn uses the virtual world... 745 01:01:55,400 --> 01:01:58,280 to choose the most promising places for the rover 746 01:01:58,360 --> 01:02:00,400 to deploy its high-tech toolkit. 747 01:02:02,600 --> 01:02:05,560 At its heart Curiosity is a chemical laboratory 748 01:02:05,640 --> 01:02:07,520 that we've landed on the surface of Mars. 749 01:02:07,600 --> 01:02:09,720 She's got a laser ablation spectrometer, 750 01:02:09,800 --> 01:02:11,800 which is a laser to zap rocks. 751 01:02:11,880 --> 01:02:13,720 You know, we can drive round and say, wow, 752 01:02:13,800 --> 01:02:18,160 that looks interesting, 'zu', 'pu', what's in there? 753 01:02:18,800 --> 01:02:22,840 And what that allows us to do is to see what Mars is made of. 754 01:02:25,400 --> 01:02:29,960 DAWN: Curiosity is designed to take the powder and heat it up 755 01:02:30,040 --> 01:02:33,680 and then it smells the chemicals that--that come off 756 01:02:33,760 --> 01:02:37,400 and those chemicals will say something about what's inside the sample. 757 01:02:38,880 --> 01:02:41,560 It doesn't tell us everything we want 758 01:02:41,640 --> 01:02:44,160 to know but it gives us some really nice clues. 759 01:02:46,160 --> 01:02:50,440 NARRATOR: In 2014, Curiosity astonished the world 760 01:02:51,600 --> 01:02:53,680 with the biggest breakthrough yet, 761 01:02:56,080 --> 01:02:59,280 in our search for extra-terrestrial life. 762 01:03:01,800 --> 01:03:06,000 What we found was organic molecules in mud stones. 763 01:03:09,400 --> 01:03:13,520 NARRATOR: Organic molecules are complex molecules containing carbon, 764 01:03:15,800 --> 01:03:19,080 the ingredients that make up all life on earth. 765 01:03:23,800 --> 01:03:25,960 JAMES: Those molecules are clues. 766 01:03:26,040 --> 01:03:29,160 We can't quite decipher exactly where they came from 767 01:03:29,240 --> 01:03:32,600 but they're so hopeful that there could be 768 01:03:32,680 --> 01:03:35,400 part of the record of what might have been ancient life on Mars. 769 01:03:40,560 --> 01:03:44,960 The biggest overall find is that Mars was a habitable planet 770 01:03:47,680 --> 01:03:50,120 and we didn't know that before Curiosity went there. 771 01:03:54,920 --> 01:03:56,200 NARRATOR: Water on the surface, 772 01:04:00,320 --> 01:04:02,680 organic molecules in the rocks. 773 01:04:05,440 --> 01:04:09,560 For at least a billion years Mars had everything 774 01:04:09,640 --> 01:04:11,360 life needs to get started 775 01:04:14,400 --> 01:04:18,360 and yet the final proof remains just out of reach. 776 01:04:20,520 --> 01:04:23,720 ASHWIN: What we have not found is that life ever took hold, 777 01:04:24,080 --> 01:04:27,200 ever made use those great conditions that Mars provided. 778 01:04:29,720 --> 01:04:34,400 NARRATOR: So strong is our desire to find that life on another planet 779 01:04:37,320 --> 01:04:39,560 that we have overreached before. 780 01:04:45,000 --> 01:04:47,000 The experts are saying tonight 781 01:04:47,080 --> 01:04:48,160 that they have, quote, 782 01:04:48,240 --> 01:04:52,400 "reasonable evidence of past life on the planet Mars." 783 01:04:52,480 --> 01:04:54,320 NARRATOR: In 1996, 784 01:04:54,400 --> 01:04:56,600 NASA shocked the world. 785 01:04:58,200 --> 01:05:02,600 Inside a meteorite from Mars, found in Antarctica, 786 01:05:02,920 --> 01:05:06,160 they discovered bacteria shaped structures. 787 01:05:06,640 --> 01:05:08,280 While the evidence may be 788 01:05:08,360 --> 01:05:11,480 just microscopic and perhaps millions of years old, 789 01:05:11,560 --> 01:05:15,160 today they displayed the rock that has rolled back years of findings 790 01:05:15,240 --> 01:05:17,560 and has made science fiction a reality. 791 01:05:18,800 --> 01:05:20,400 NARRATOR: The whole world was asking, 792 01:05:21,080 --> 01:05:23,520 was this really life from Mars? 793 01:05:24,360 --> 01:05:26,760 If this discovery is confirmed 794 01:05:27,400 --> 01:05:30,600 it will surely be one of the most stunning insights into our universe 795 01:05:30,680 --> 01:05:32,840 that science has ever uncovered. 796 01:05:35,440 --> 01:05:38,240 NARRATOR: But the dream soon began to fracture. 797 01:05:38,840 --> 01:05:41,160 People started interrogating and then doubting. 798 01:05:41,240 --> 01:05:44,040 It was so hard to prove the morphology, 799 01:05:44,120 --> 01:05:46,120 the shape of what we thought we were seeing 800 01:05:46,200 --> 01:05:47,240 was actually made by life. 801 01:05:50,600 --> 01:05:53,920 AMY: This isn't something obvious like digging up a dinosaur skull. 802 01:05:54,320 --> 01:05:57,920 This is a microscopic bacteria billions of years old. 803 01:05:58,000 --> 01:05:59,640 We don't know what this is. 804 01:06:01,200 --> 01:06:05,280 NARRATOR: The strangest puzzle was the size of the shapes in the rock, 805 01:06:06,320 --> 01:06:09,480 smaller than any life ever recorded on earth, 806 01:06:10,480 --> 01:06:13,800 smaller than life could ever exist 807 01:06:15,680 --> 01:06:17,960 or so we thought. 808 01:06:23,640 --> 01:06:28,120 (intense music playing) 809 01:06:32,840 --> 01:06:35,120 NARRATOR: Today, one scientist's work 810 01:06:35,200 --> 01:06:39,080 is making us rethink the search for life on Mars. 811 01:06:48,120 --> 01:06:53,360 (intense music playing) 812 01:06:58,840 --> 01:07:01,360 This is Dalol, Ethiopia, 813 01:07:04,800 --> 01:07:07,560 one of the most hostile places on earth. 814 01:07:11,600 --> 01:07:13,920 Here, volcanic forces 815 01:07:14,000 --> 01:07:17,920 create conditions very similar to those on ancient Mars... 816 01:07:22,160 --> 01:07:25,080 and that attracts astrobiologists 817 01:07:25,160 --> 01:07:27,360 like Felipe Gómez Gómez. 818 01:07:35,600 --> 01:07:37,840 FELIPE: There is a heavy smell in the air. 819 01:07:39,960 --> 01:07:42,720 The water coming out from the chimneys 820 01:07:43,680 --> 01:07:47,440 can be higher than one hundred degree Celsius. 821 01:07:49,880 --> 01:07:53,920 Salinity, it's practically saturated in salt. 822 01:07:57,960 --> 01:07:59,240 The water pH 823 01:08:00,000 --> 01:08:02,800 is more acidic than a car battery. 824 01:08:10,960 --> 01:08:14,840 Early Mars was quite similar to this kind of environment. 825 01:08:17,360 --> 01:08:18,960 MAN 2: You don't want to put your hands into that. 826 01:08:19,760 --> 01:08:22,840 No, it would be burned. 827 01:08:22,920 --> 01:08:24,080 Yeah, I know. 828 01:08:28,200 --> 01:08:30,520 NARRATOR: Inside these samples, 829 01:08:31,440 --> 01:08:35,120 Felipe has uncovered something no one was expecting. 830 01:08:39,520 --> 01:08:43,360 (speaking in native language) 831 01:08:50,800 --> 01:08:54,080 (speaking in native language) 832 01:08:58,000 --> 01:08:59,280 These are microbes? 833 01:08:59,360 --> 01:09:01,160 Yup. The bacteria. 834 01:09:04,120 --> 01:09:06,760 These were found in Dallol, in the pools of Dallol. 835 01:09:07,320 --> 01:09:08,360 Wow. 836 01:09:08,440 --> 01:09:10,720 Living inside the salt, interacting with the salt. 837 01:09:10,800 --> 01:09:14,040 Multiplying themselves and colonizing 838 01:09:14,120 --> 01:09:15,960 this really extreme environment. 839 01:09:16,840 --> 01:09:18,760 So you are telling me these things are alive? 840 01:09:18,840 --> 01:09:21,160 They are not fossils of bacteria? 841 01:09:21,240 --> 01:09:23,240 Exactly, they are bacteria and they are alive. 842 01:09:23,320 --> 01:09:24,320 They are growing. 843 01:09:26,080 --> 01:09:28,560 NARRATOR: The very things that make this environment 844 01:09:28,640 --> 01:09:30,760 so dangerous to us 845 01:09:30,840 --> 01:09:32,280 make it perfect 846 01:09:32,360 --> 01:09:36,240 for primitive lifeforms to get started. 847 01:09:39,480 --> 01:09:40,680 So they eat the salt? 848 01:09:40,760 --> 01:09:41,760 They eat the salt. 849 01:09:41,840 --> 01:09:46,600 They are able to take the energy, the power supply from the minerals. 850 01:09:48,160 --> 01:09:49,840 NARRATOR: But the breakthrough 851 01:09:49,920 --> 01:09:54,560 isn't just that bacteria exist, it's also their size. 852 01:09:54,920 --> 01:09:58,320 They are twenty times smaller than the regular bacteria. 853 01:09:58,400 --> 01:09:59,560 It's nanobacteria. 854 01:10:01,120 --> 01:10:04,360 NARRATOR: The bacteria are about the same size 855 01:10:04,440 --> 01:10:08,080 as the mysterious shapes found in the Antarctica meteorite. 856 01:10:10,680 --> 01:10:15,720 This extreme environment is like Mars was four billion years ago 857 01:10:15,800 --> 01:10:18,360 at a very early age of Mars. 858 01:10:18,440 --> 01:10:22,160 And if there is life here, who knows that probably 859 01:10:22,240 --> 01:10:25,240 could be possible to find similar life on Mars. 860 01:10:26,440 --> 01:10:27,720 (speaking in native language) 861 01:10:29,120 --> 01:10:31,960 NARRATOR: The discoveries of extreme life on earth 862 01:10:33,560 --> 01:10:35,680 have reignited our hope... 863 01:10:39,320 --> 01:10:42,240 of finding life on Mars 864 01:10:43,640 --> 01:10:47,880 and that's exactly what NASA's next mission will attempt to do-- 865 01:10:49,840 --> 01:10:52,400 Dig for alien fossils. 866 01:10:58,280 --> 01:10:59,720 (beeping) 867 01:11:07,200 --> 01:11:10,840 2,400 miles west of Gale Crater 868 01:11:10,920 --> 01:11:13,320 is the site targeted for the search. 869 01:11:17,160 --> 01:11:22,520 It will make Mars 2020 NASA's toughest mission yet. 870 01:11:29,600 --> 01:11:33,040 Jezero Crater is a rugged, cracked landscape, 871 01:11:33,920 --> 01:11:37,280 with jagged channels carved through the rock. 872 01:11:41,320 --> 01:11:45,840 Scientists now know this is the fossilized remains 873 01:11:45,920 --> 01:11:48,280 of a giant river delta. 874 01:11:56,960 --> 01:11:58,920 On ancient Mars 875 01:11:59,000 --> 01:12:04,000 this would have been the perfect place for life to thrive 876 01:12:06,360 --> 01:12:10,320 and Jezero also has the perfect conditions 877 01:12:10,400 --> 01:12:13,960 to preserve fossils of it to this day. 878 01:12:17,760 --> 01:12:21,080 MAN: Over time, sediment builds up, layer after layer. 879 01:12:23,920 --> 01:12:26,960 WOMAN: Any life forms present or organic molecules 880 01:12:27,040 --> 01:12:29,560 would have been concentrated in those layers of mud. 881 01:12:31,360 --> 01:12:35,080 It's a layer cake of stories in the record of the rocks. 882 01:12:37,680 --> 01:12:39,720 DAVID: Buried treasure that's been sitting there, 883 01:12:39,800 --> 01:12:41,480 waiting all these billions of years now 884 01:12:41,560 --> 01:12:44,080 for us to go and dig it up and see what's there. 885 01:12:46,800 --> 01:12:49,200 NARRATOR: But the best place for hunt for life 886 01:12:50,880 --> 01:12:53,400 is the toughest place to land 887 01:12:53,920 --> 01:12:56,400 and in February 2021 888 01:12:56,720 --> 01:13:00,800 that's exactly what NASA will attempt to do. 889 01:13:01,800 --> 01:13:04,160 NAGIN: Of course, if it was entirely up to the engineers 890 01:13:04,240 --> 01:13:07,000 we would pick a completely flat place with no rocks 891 01:13:07,080 --> 01:13:10,160 and no winds and the scientists would immediately say, 892 01:13:10,240 --> 01:13:11,240 well that's super boring. 893 01:13:13,080 --> 01:13:15,440 ADAM: This mission, it's a big deal. 894 01:13:16,680 --> 01:13:19,680 It's the most ambitious mission we've ever attempted, 895 01:13:20,880 --> 01:13:25,440 so for 2020 we will take the rover and put it in places 896 01:13:25,520 --> 01:13:28,440 that would be unthinkable for Curiosity 897 01:13:28,520 --> 01:13:31,440 or the airbag landings of history. 898 01:13:34,640 --> 01:13:37,120 NARRATOR: Unlike on previous missions, 899 01:13:37,200 --> 01:13:42,560 this landing site will be full of rover killing hazards. 900 01:13:44,000 --> 01:13:47,160 But NASA has a new trick up its sleeve. 901 01:13:57,760 --> 01:14:01,920 NARRATOR: Every mission to Mars has faced one huge problem. 902 01:14:03,000 --> 01:14:06,720 It takes 20 minutes to get a signal back to earth. 903 01:14:10,280 --> 01:14:14,880 So engineers can't guide the spacecraft from their control room. 904 01:14:17,520 --> 01:14:21,400 But Mars 2020 will have a super power. 905 01:14:25,080 --> 01:14:28,760 It will be able to navigate itself. 906 01:14:30,760 --> 01:14:33,120 ADAM: For Mars 2020 we took the landing system 907 01:14:33,200 --> 01:14:38,440 that we'd used on Curiosity and we added a very important feature, 908 01:14:39,520 --> 01:14:44,160 an ability to tell where it is on Mars. 909 01:14:45,680 --> 01:14:46,840 NARRATOR: For this mission, 910 01:14:47,320 --> 01:14:50,640 the engineers from NASA's jet propulsion laboratory 911 01:14:50,720 --> 01:14:53,440 have harnessed the power of HiRISE. 912 01:14:55,520 --> 01:14:59,800 They have used its images to build a map of the landing site 913 01:14:59,880 --> 01:15:01,880 in incredible detail. 914 01:15:04,520 --> 01:15:08,840 We've used HiRISE to help us understand the dangers 915 01:15:08,920 --> 01:15:11,120 that the terrain might provide. 916 01:15:15,640 --> 01:15:17,320 NARRATOR: Mars 2020 917 01:15:17,920 --> 01:15:21,360 will compare the map with what it sees on the ground. 918 01:15:34,160 --> 01:15:37,600 Then it will zero in on its target. 919 01:15:47,880 --> 01:15:53,120 Retro rockets will guide this $2.5 billion rover 920 01:15:55,520 --> 01:15:57,760 safely to the surface. 921 01:16:05,560 --> 01:16:07,520 (whirring) 922 01:16:42,600 --> 01:16:47,400 Once on the ground Mars 2020 will carry out its simple 923 01:16:47,480 --> 01:16:49,920 but awe-inspiring task, 924 01:16:53,480 --> 01:16:56,520 to burrow into the planet's surface, 925 01:16:56,600 --> 01:17:00,080 searching for fossils of Martian life. 926 01:17:05,840 --> 01:17:08,600 DIANA: Is there life or was there life on the surface of Mars? 927 01:17:08,680 --> 01:17:11,600 It can't get more fundamental than that. 928 01:17:11,680 --> 01:17:15,080 I can't imagine a Mars that wasn't alive in some way. 929 01:17:15,160 --> 01:17:17,480 If Mars 2020 can answer that question 930 01:17:17,560 --> 01:17:21,480 I think that we can drop the mic at JPL and just walk out of the lab 931 01:17:21,560 --> 01:17:25,240 because we had just answered the most fundamental question of human history. 932 01:17:31,880 --> 01:17:35,640 NARRATOR: As these robot pioneers hunt for life on Mars, 933 01:17:40,800 --> 01:17:44,160 we are laying the groundwork for the next great challenge-- 934 01:17:46,800 --> 01:17:50,480 sending human pioneers to join them. 935 01:17:51,560 --> 01:17:53,560 BRIDENSTEIN (over PA): The moon is the proving ground, 936 01:17:53,640 --> 01:17:55,400 Mars is the horizon goal. 937 01:17:56,600 --> 01:17:57,880 WOMAN (over radio): We have ignition of 938 01:17:57,960 --> 01:18:00,600 NASA's space launch system solid rocket motor, 939 01:18:00,680 --> 01:18:02,520 powering us on our journey to Mars. 940 01:18:04,480 --> 01:18:07,920 NARRATOR: Engineers are racing to develop the technology. 941 01:18:08,800 --> 01:18:09,960 ELON (over PA): Do you want the future 942 01:18:10,040 --> 01:18:11,840 where we become a space faring civilization 943 01:18:11,920 --> 01:18:13,200 and are out there among the stars 944 01:18:13,280 --> 01:18:15,520 or one where we are forever confined to earth? 945 01:18:25,840 --> 01:18:29,480 Space exploration, a tough but not impossible thing. 946 01:18:32,320 --> 01:18:34,800 NARRATOR: The first humans who will set foot on Mars 947 01:18:34,880 --> 01:18:36,520 are already among us. 948 01:18:37,000 --> 01:18:39,320 MAN: We intend to send her to Mars one day, folks. 949 01:18:55,000 --> 01:18:57,440 NARRATOR: But this mission will be together than anything 950 01:18:57,520 --> 01:18:58,920 we've ever attempted. 951 01:19:01,960 --> 01:19:03,960 There are two giant hurdles. 952 01:19:05,440 --> 01:19:08,400 First, you have to get there. 953 01:19:12,000 --> 01:19:13,960 There's really no shortage of challenges 954 01:19:14,040 --> 01:19:17,240 when it comes to getting humans to Mars, (stammers) not on Mars, 955 01:19:17,320 --> 01:19:18,640 just to Mars. 956 01:19:20,360 --> 01:19:22,160 ADAM: The navigation is hard. 957 01:19:22,560 --> 01:19:25,240 A little bit off and you will burn up because 958 01:19:25,320 --> 01:19:27,080 you're coming in too steep and then come in too shallow 959 01:19:27,160 --> 01:19:29,440 you'll skip off into the solar system 960 01:19:29,520 --> 01:19:32,320 and orbit the sun forever and be dead. 961 01:19:35,480 --> 01:19:38,480 LUJENDRA: It takes about seven months to get to Mars. 962 01:19:38,840 --> 01:19:42,080 Once you get on Mars you have to be there for two more years 963 01:19:42,160 --> 01:19:44,520 before you can take the return flight back to earth. 964 01:19:45,880 --> 01:19:48,920 WOMAN: You're going to have a kind of cabin fever 965 01:19:49,000 --> 01:19:50,640 that's--that's unprecedented. 966 01:19:52,920 --> 01:19:55,080 NARRATOR: When you finally arrive on the planet 967 01:19:55,160 --> 01:19:59,200 you have to survive in terrifying conditions. 968 01:20:04,240 --> 01:20:05,760 Unbreathable air, 969 01:20:07,240 --> 01:20:12,440 extreme cold, toxic dust. 970 01:20:18,880 --> 01:20:23,080 And an unseen danger that even spacesuits offer 971 01:20:23,160 --> 01:20:24,960 little protect against. 972 01:20:27,560 --> 01:20:29,000 Deadly radiation. 973 01:20:36,440 --> 01:20:38,600 It seems an impossible problem. 974 01:20:41,320 --> 01:20:44,600 But the planet also offers a solution. 975 01:20:48,080 --> 01:20:50,480 (beeping) 976 01:20:55,960 --> 01:20:59,600 NARRATOR: Just 350 miles west of Jezero Crater, 977 01:21:00,120 --> 01:21:03,320 where Mars 2020 will hunt for alien life, 978 01:21:03,800 --> 01:21:06,280 we return to Syrtis Major, 979 01:21:06,360 --> 01:21:09,160 where we first thought we saw it. 980 01:21:11,480 --> 01:21:14,800 And here, where our journey began, 981 01:21:14,880 --> 01:21:20,480 we find the key to living on Mars... ourselves. 982 01:21:25,840 --> 01:21:27,440 DAVID: Every once in a while, we come across one of these 983 01:21:27,520 --> 01:21:31,720 sort of strange snaky, snake like forms. 984 01:21:33,680 --> 01:21:37,120 And this is in terrain that's incredibly flat, 985 01:21:37,200 --> 01:21:38,440 highly cratered. 986 01:21:41,000 --> 01:21:43,440 We're pretty sure these features are lava tubes. 987 01:21:46,160 --> 01:21:48,120 NINA: Lava tubes form near volcanoes 988 01:21:48,200 --> 01:21:50,720 as lava is flowing out through fractures. 989 01:21:51,760 --> 01:21:53,840 TANYA: And eventually that kinda drains out 990 01:21:53,920 --> 01:21:56,000 and it leaves these caverns behind. 991 01:21:57,680 --> 01:22:01,640 ABIGAIL: Sometimes we can see holes punch through these features 992 01:22:01,720 --> 01:22:03,480 and these are dark holes 993 01:22:03,560 --> 01:22:06,280 and when you look down you just see darkness. 994 01:22:10,640 --> 01:22:14,280 NARRATOR: No human invention has yet cracked the radiation problem. 995 01:22:17,840 --> 01:22:23,160 But these underground wonders might just be our salvation. 996 01:22:54,080 --> 01:22:56,480 Deep in the mountains of northern Spain 997 01:22:57,840 --> 01:23:01,960 a team of scientists is exploring how we might survive 998 01:23:02,040 --> 01:23:04,280 in Mars' lethal environment. 999 01:23:06,120 --> 01:23:08,040 JOSÉ: I believe what we're going to do on Mars 1000 01:23:08,120 --> 01:23:09,600 will be incredible. 1001 01:23:11,400 --> 01:23:12,720 But it is not easy. 1002 01:23:12,800 --> 01:23:14,560 We evolved on planet Earth 1003 01:23:14,640 --> 01:23:18,040 and our biology is accustomed to this planet. 1004 01:23:19,280 --> 01:23:21,640 CARMEN: If you would live on Mars for longer time, 1005 01:23:21,720 --> 01:23:23,080 even wearing the spacesuit, 1006 01:23:23,160 --> 01:23:24,760 the radiation would definitely be deadly. 1007 01:23:28,440 --> 01:23:31,360 We need to go underground and obviously 1008 01:23:31,440 --> 01:23:32,720 the deeper we are 1009 01:23:32,800 --> 01:23:35,800 the more protection we will have from radiation. 1010 01:23:41,240 --> 01:23:43,280 Some of these caves are really, really long. 1011 01:23:43,360 --> 01:23:45,280 They could be several kilometers long, 1012 01:23:45,360 --> 01:23:50,280 so we could go deeper and deeper and create a habitat for us to live. 1013 01:23:52,720 --> 01:23:56,040 NARRATOR: Here, in its own version of a Martian lava tube, 1014 01:23:56,680 --> 01:24:00,560 the team can find out what this subterranean life 1015 01:24:00,640 --> 01:24:02,040 might be like. 1016 01:24:02,840 --> 01:24:05,800 You lose track of time really because 1017 01:24:05,880 --> 01:24:07,360 you don't have any day or night. 1018 01:24:08,720 --> 01:24:10,480 You're in a confined environment, 1019 01:24:10,560 --> 01:24:12,800 in an extreme environment, 1020 01:24:12,880 --> 01:24:14,520 which makes it very challenging. 1021 01:24:15,840 --> 01:24:18,720 We need to be independent in every way, 1022 01:24:18,800 --> 01:24:21,080 not just psychologically independent 1023 01:24:21,160 --> 01:24:25,640 but in terms of food, materials, resources, energy. 1024 01:24:28,720 --> 01:24:31,640 This would be our home on planet Mars 1025 01:24:31,720 --> 01:24:35,720 and we need to create an environment for us to survive and to thrive. 1026 01:24:38,800 --> 01:24:42,400 NARRATOR: Lava tubes will provide a readymade shelter 1027 01:24:42,480 --> 01:24:44,760 for the first intrepid pioneers. 1028 01:24:47,800 --> 01:24:49,320 And experts believe 1029 01:24:49,400 --> 01:24:52,760 they could also be sites for longer term settlements. 1030 01:24:54,320 --> 01:24:58,960 Some may even be large enough to fit whole cities inside. 1031 01:25:07,120 --> 01:25:12,200 JOSÉ: We live between the last human single planetary generation 1032 01:25:12,280 --> 01:25:15,720 and the first multi planetary generation. 1033 01:25:16,280 --> 01:25:20,040 Once we colonize Mars we will change history, 1034 01:25:20,120 --> 01:25:21,880 we will change the future. 1035 01:25:24,680 --> 01:25:28,240 NARRATOR: And it may be, in these lava tubes, 1036 01:25:28,320 --> 01:25:32,920 that the quest that has driven our interest in Mars for centuries 1037 01:25:33,000 --> 01:25:35,760 finally comes to an end. 1038 01:25:36,560 --> 01:25:40,160 Those same conditions that will keep us safe underground 1039 01:25:41,040 --> 01:25:44,280 might, for billions of years, 1040 01:25:44,360 --> 01:25:47,400 have kept something else safe too, 1041 01:25:48,560 --> 01:25:50,360 living Martian life. 1042 01:25:52,400 --> 01:25:56,240 DAVID: Because of the tremendous radiation bathing the surface 1043 01:25:56,320 --> 01:25:58,960 any lifeforms that are there today 1044 01:25:59,040 --> 01:26:01,080 are gonna be buried under the surface. 1045 01:26:01,160 --> 01:26:05,120 This is a whole new place for us to explore on Mars 1046 01:26:05,200 --> 01:26:06,920 and, in particular, it's one of those places 1047 01:26:07,000 --> 01:26:10,280 that seems like it could be a really good habitat 1048 01:26:10,360 --> 01:26:13,080 for any extant Martian life, should it exist. 1049 01:26:25,480 --> 01:26:28,240 NARRATOR: Our day on Mars is coming to a close. 1050 01:26:38,240 --> 01:26:41,880 The sun is setting over the dunes of Syrtis Major. 1051 01:26:44,840 --> 01:26:48,880 Once this place made us dream of an earth like world, 1052 01:26:51,040 --> 01:26:54,320 but our journey has revealed Mars' story to be 1053 01:26:54,400 --> 01:26:57,280 more astonishing than anything we could have imagined. 1054 01:26:59,360 --> 01:27:04,520 And now, at last, it's almost within our reach. 1055 01:27:12,960 --> 01:27:14,760 NINA: Mars is like my second home. 1056 01:27:16,200 --> 01:27:17,360 I would love to go visit. 1057 01:27:21,480 --> 01:27:22,640 It is magnificent. 1058 01:27:26,160 --> 01:27:27,680 (explosion) 1059 01:27:35,520 --> 01:27:39,080 ADAM: I used to dream about being the first person to climb Olympus Mons, 1060 01:27:40,560 --> 01:27:42,880 the biggest mountain in the solar system, 1061 01:27:42,960 --> 01:27:44,480 plant the flag on top. 1062 01:27:46,080 --> 01:27:49,720 DERRICK: Mars makes us redefine who we are 1063 01:27:50,600 --> 01:27:53,640 and what are connection is to the universe. 1064 01:27:54,800 --> 01:27:57,680 JAMES: Would I go? Of course, in a heartbeat.