Life on Mars: Little Green Men, or Little Grey Bugs?

Planet Mars is a close neighbour of the Earth - on average, its orbit is only about 78 million km away and it may come as near as 58 million km. We know much about this planet, from space missions, Earth-based observations and also through study of martian meteorites.

There have been over 30 space missions to Mars since 1960. Why is Mars so popular? Why is it thought to be a prime place to search for signs of past or present life?

Surface features on Mars indicate that water might once have been present - and where there is water, there may be life! If there has been life on Mars, it is likely to have been only fairly primitive. The forthcoming space mission Mars Express, with its lander Beagle 2, is designed to search for evidence for life on Mars.

  Life in the Universe
  Exploring the Solar System
    Mars
      The Features
      Space Missions to Mars
      Water on Mars?
      Life on Mars?
      Future Space Missions to Mars
      Meteorites from Mars

 
This is all of Mars. The picture was reconstructed from over 200 million laser altimeter measurements taken by the Mars Global Surveyor spacecraft. Particularly notable are the volcanoes of the Tharsis province, visible on the left, which are taller than any mountains on Earth. Just to the left of the centre is Valles Marineris, a canyon much longer and deeper than the Grand Canyon. On the right, south of the centre, is the Hellas Planitia, a basin over 2000 kilometres wide that was probably created by a collision with an asteroid.

A simulated sequence of how Mars would look to Earth-based observers using images from the Mars Global Surveyor (MGS) spacecraft orbiting 400 kilometers above the red planet. The data were acquired by MOC between June 5 and June 7, 2001. (NASA/JPL/Malin Space Science Systems.).

Last updated July 25, 2001