The sirens of Mars Searching for life on another world

Sarah Stewart Johnson

Book - 2020

"A young planetary scientist intimately details the search for life on Mars, tracing our centuries-old obsession with this seemingly desolate planet. Mars was once similar to Earth, but today there are no rivers, no lakes, no oceans. Coated in red dust, the terrain is bewilderingly empty. And yet multiple spacecraft are circling Mars, sweeping over Terra Sabaea, Syrtis Major, the dunes of Elysium, and Mare Sirenum-on the brink, perhaps, of a staggering find, one that would inspire humankind as much as any discovery in the history of modern science. In this beautifully observed, deeply personal book, Georgetown scientist Sarah Stewart Johnson tells the story of how she and other researchers have scoured Mars for signs of life, transform...ing the planet from a distant point of light into a world of its own. Johnson's fascination with Mars began as a child in Kentucky, turning over rocks with her father and looking at planets in the night sky. She now conducts fieldwork in some of Earth's most hostile environments, such as the Dry Valleys of Antarctica and the salt flats of Western Australia, developing methods for detecting life on other worlds. Here, with poetic precision, she interlaces her own personal journey-as a female scientist and a mother-with tales of other seekers, from Percival Lowell, who was convinced that a utopian society existed on Mars, to Audouin Dollfus, who tried to carry out astronomical observations from a stratospheric balloon. In the process, she shows how the story of Mars is also a story about Earth: This other world has been our mirror, our foil, a telltale reflection of our own anxieties and yearnings. Empathetic and evocative, The Sirens of Mars offers an unlikely natural history of a place where no human has ever set foot, while providing a vivid portrait of our quest to defy our isolation in the cosmos"--

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Subjects
Published
New York : Crown [2020]
Language
English
Main Author
Sarah Stewart Johnson (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xiii, 266 pages ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781101904817
  • Prologue
  • Part 1. A Point is that Which has no Part.
  • Chapter 1. Into the Silent Sea
  • Chapter 2. The Light that Shifts
  • Chapter 3. Red Smoke
  • Part 2. A Line is Breadthless Length.
  • Chapter 4. The Gates of the Wonder World
  • Chapter 5. Stone from the Sky
  • Chapter 6. Traversing
  • Chapter 7. Periapsis
  • Chapter 8. The Acid Flats
  • Part 3. A Boundary is that which is an Extremity of Anything.
  • Chapter 9. In Aeternum
  • Chapter 10. Sweet Water
  • Chapter 11. Form from a Formless Thing
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Choice Review

Johnson (Georgetown Univ.) is a female planetary scientist who has been a member of the science teams for several recent spacecraft missions to Mars. In this book, she not only shares the rich history of Mars science, providing plenty of stories about the important people in that history, notably Carl Sagan, but also unfolds her own biography. While Johnson focuses mostly on the successes and insights from the study of Mars as pursued in recent decades, she also devotes space to personal recollections about being mentored and inspired by one of the few senior female planetary scientists involved in these missions. She openly shares details about meeting her spouse and having her children while studying Mars, providing important background for readers who wish to learn and teach about the human side of doing science, and not just the science itself. Science is done by scientists--an idea this reviewer has stressed in his courses for years, often in order to call attention to important work that may not have received the attention it deserved. Books like this one make exemplary sources for teaching about the people behind the science. Summing Up: Highly recommended. All readers. --Christopher Palma, Pennsylvania State University

Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by Booklist Review

Planetary scientist Johnson walks readers through the history of Mars exploration, from the earliest days, when scientists gazed up at the red planet searching for signs of life through telescopic lenses, to the contemporary study of Mars via rovers. After centuries of viewing Mars from afar and speculating about the possibility of life there, the first successful mission to the red planet was launched in 1965, when the Mariner 4 spacecraft sent back images, but the desolate surface it revealed was more similar to the Moon than Earth. As scientists continued to study life in inhospitable climates on our own planet, and subsequent missions revealed evidence that water had once existed on Mars, hopes of discovering life there were rekindled. Johnson details her call to science as a girl, her experiences as a female scientist, and how her involvement with Mars began in 2004 when, as a graduate student, she went to the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California to observe the rovers Curiosity and Opportunity as they roamed the Martian terrain. A heady and thoughtful history for space and science buffs.Women in Focus: The 19th in 2020

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Planetary scientist Johnson delivers an enthusiastic and lyrical chronicle of the scientific quest to uncover Mars's secrets. From Mars's prominent place in the night sky, to the water-filled "canali" 19th-century Milanese astronomer Giovanni Schiaparelli and 20th-century Mars enthusiast Percival Lowell imagined they perceived on its surface, the red planet has long provoked imagination and speculation. "Before it rusted over, Mars was much more like Earth," Johnson writes by way of explaining why modern scientists, including herself, have searched for life on an apparently barren planet. Evincing a gift for vivid imagery, she shares memories from her own work, including of how computer software transforms images of the Martian surface into detail-packed, "psychedelic swathes of colors." She also provides a general timeline of the four Mars rover missions, detailing the goals and findings of each one, always focusing on the discoveries' implications for the search for alien life, as when a rover discovered traces of the elements required for life: carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, phosphorus, and sulfur. Johnson's skillful narrative will engage serious students of planetary science as well as armchair adventurers curious about "a wilderness stretching off into the horizon, vast and full of possibility." (June)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

For centuries, Mars has been a source of fascination for many astronomers and other scientists. Johnson (planetary science, Georgetown Univ.) paints a colorful history of the Red Planet and the people who have attempted to uncover its secrets. She recounts many of the scientists who have observed Mars ever since the Mesopotamians distinguished Mars as a planet and not a star. Ground-breaking astronomers such as Galileo, Christian Huygens, Giovanni Schiaparelli, and Percival Lowell hoped to learn more about the geography and climate of the planet. Yet, like astronomer Carl Sagan of Cosmos fame, the author is lured by the notion that life exists beyond Earth. Through her descriptions of NASA Mars missions such as Mariner, Viking, and Pathfinder, the author reveals her passion to join the quest for knowing Mars. Johnson also reflects about what exploring Mars means for human existence, drawing readers into learning about each new revelation brought forth by scientists or planetary rovers. VERDICT Part natural history of Mars and part personal story, this narrative is accessible and eloquent, making it essential for armchair explorers and Mars enthusiasts. Johnson's journey is also inspiring to women interested in S.T.E.M. careers.--Donna Marie Smith, Palm Beach Cty. Lib. Syst., FL

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A planetary scientist details the remarkable history of humankind's efforts to find signs of life on Mars. Speculation on the nature of Mars, and whether it could harbor life, goes back to the early days of astronomy, when thinkers such as Galileo and Newton peered into the night sky using primitive technologies to examine Mars' surface. For centuries, theories of what existed there ran rampant. "The idea that Mars was like our planet only drove the quest to see it better," writes Johnson, who teaches at Georgetown. Then, in November 1964, NASA launched the spacecraft Mariner 4 and obtained the first close-up images of Mars. This success presaged many Mars missions, three of which the author worked on as a planetary scientist. In accessible and sometimes captivating language, Johnson tells the stories of the people and technologies driving these pioneering quests to study the red planet's biochemical and geographical makeup. She also deftly unpacks the existential stakes that underlie scientists' aspirations to demonstrate that humans are not alone in the universe. Blending professional and personal narratives in her discussions of major discoveries--e.g., Mars' surface once held water; Martian rock samples contain the elements required for life--she provides a lucid portrait of the countless challenges and breakthroughs of planetary science. The author also demonstrates how the field of extremophile biology--"investigating the crooks and crevices of our planet to better understand the limits of life"--is a key component in the Mars efforts. These recurring themes of optimism, persistence, and survival anchor the book and infuse Johnson's writing with philosophical weight. Finding life on Mars, she writes, "would be a shimmering hope that life might not be an ephemeral thing, even if we are." A vivid, poetic account that leaves readers eager to see what's next in the quest to find extraterrestrial life. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

In July of 1965, as a tiny octagonal spacecraft swooped across the Martian surface, my father, who had just turned eighteen, was standing tall on a humid, hardwood-forested hill in Appalachia. There on the edge of Viper, Kentucky--below a hundred kilometers of nitrogen and oxygen, under the Kármán line, the exosphere, and the Van Allen belt, beneath the great, vast vacuum of space--a small natural-gas company had sent a bulldozer up a holler and had set about carving out a flat spot for drilling. On the days my father managed to drive the old jeep through the creek bed without flooding the engine, he joined an overalls-clad, illiterate crew in digging ditches and laying pipe, occasionally carrying the casing for the drill head. He'd hoped to spend the summer as a fledgling assistant to the company geologist, but within two weeks, every available worker had been sent to the hillside. The news about the world's first Mars mission, Mariner 4, came by way of The Courier-Journal, the newspaper out of Louisville. It arrived on a truck that twisted along the deeply gouged mountain roads, passed the coal camps, passed Hazard High School, and made its way into the small downtown, which was bound like a bobby pin by the North Fork of the Kentucky River. That morning, my grandfather had picked up the newspaper from Fouts Drug. He'd tucked it under his arm on his way to work at the health department. As a medical technician, he inspected the Cold War-era bomb shelters that dotted the mountain ridges to make sure the food stocks were safe and drew blood to test for syphilis before young couples got married. He took pride in the fact that everyone in town called him "Doc." He wasn't a doctor, but he did give penicillin shots throughout the hills of eastern Kentucky: down in Gilly, up in Typo, in Slemp and Scuddy, in Happy, Yeaddiss, and Busy. When my grandmother wasn't giving perms, she would help out. She liked running the X-ray machine. It was still muggy later that evening as my grandfather meandered up Broadway--a street that was anything but broad, a single paved lane that fell steeply into backyards teeming with kudzu. He walked into a house that hung like a bat to the side of the ravine, leaving The Courier-Journal in the attic bedroom, which was spacious now that four of the six kids had left home. His lanky, wide-eared child, his youngest son, would also leave at the end of the summer, heading two hours west across the steep forested slopes to attend Berea College. My grandfather put the paper on the quilt where my father was sure to find it, next to his Popular Science magazine, right beneath a poster of the pockmarked moon. My father had been rapt by the idea of the mission, NASA's chance to photograph the planet most similar to Earth. As the mountain town rotated into darkness that Wednesday, my father climbed the steps, aching and exhausted, and he saw the headline. Above the fold, between a picture of Willie Mays and an article on Vietnam, was what he'd been waiting for: mankind, through mariner, reaching for mars today. He smiled and fell into bed as he read. "Today the fingertip of mankind reaches out 134 million miles to Mars, almost touching the only other body in the solar system widely suspected of harboring life . . ." On the other side of the country, in a canyon north of Pasadena, an eager crowd had gathered on the campus of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory. Inside JPL's von Kármán auditorium, intertwined cables, thick and vaguely subterranean, unfurled from a cluster of television cameras and snaked across the floor to the vans outside. Radio from all over the world was hooked in by relay, and the Brits were poised to broadcast a live television feed, having leased a full two minutes of time from the "Early Bird" satellite. There were thirty-seven phones in varying states of use: thirty-six within the press bank, and one sitting atop a desk as part of a small fake office where the TV broadcasters could be filmed. From floor to ceiling, dominating one side of the great room, was a full-scale spacecraft, one of the flight-ready spares that had been used for temperature-control testing. It had the same octagonal magnesium frame as Mariner 4, the same 260 kilograms of hardware and instrumentation. There were 138,000 parts in all: aluminum tubes, attitude-control jets, pyro end cabling. The solar panels, including flaps at the end, stretched seven meters. Coated with sapphire glass, glistening in the beams of the television lights, they looked like the wings of a jeweled pterodactyl. Much depended on this craft. In a scene that played out repeatedly over the course of the twentieth century, a Soviet spacecraft was approaching Mars at the same time. It had launched from the Baikonur Cosmodrome just two days after Mariner 4. It had reached Mars, but, much to NASA's delight, it wouldn't be returning any data. Halfway there, irregular updates had started coming from its communications systems, and then the transmitter died. It was now no more than "the voiceless 'Russian spy,' " "The 'Dead' Soviet Mars missile." At long last, the United States had a chance to pull ahead in the Space Race. There was only one hurdle standing in the way of American triumph: Mariner 4 had to aim and actuate the camera and successfully transmit its images back to Earth. This was no easy feat. Mars was so far from the sun that the mission only had 310 watts of usable power, the equivalent of a couple of lightbulbs. The power available to send the data stream would be a mere ten watts to start, which would dissipate to a tenth of a billionth of a billionth of a watt by the time it was captured in the great dishes of the Deep Space Network, the newly built antennas on the outskirts of Johannesburg and Canberra, and deep in the Mojave Desert. And even if the data arrived, there were worries. What if the pictures snapped a bit too early, or a bit too late? What if the spacecraft inadvertently twisted away from the planet at just the wrong moment? What if the camera failed to shut off, recording over the photographs of Mars with pointless photographs of empty space? The Soviets had been trying to reach Mars for five years. In space exploration as in all things, they were a formidable adversary. In 1960, their first pair of missions had coincided with Premier Nikita Khrushchev's visit to the United Nations General Assembly in New York. He'd commissioned models of the Mars probes and brought them along to show the world. Less than two months earlier, his lead rocket engineer had launched into space the first sentient beings that returned safely to Earth: two dogs, a gray rabbit, forty mice, two rats, and several flies. But the Soviets were not so lucky this time. As the delegates assembled in New York, the first rocket to Mars failed, climbing just 120 kilometers before falling back to Earth and crashing in eastern Siberia. Then the second rocket failed: A cryogenic leak had frozen the kerosene fuel in the engine inlet. Khrushchev had been relying on another splendid performance from his ambitious young space program and was furious as he paced the halls of the U.N. Before the plenary meeting came to a close, he supposedly went so far as to pull off his shoe, enraged, and brandish it angrily at another country's delegate. The Soviets tried again with a trio of missions in 1962. The first ruptured in orbit, fanning out debris that was detected by a U.S. radar installation in Alaska. It was nine days into the Cuban Missile Crisis, and the wreckage was momentarily feared by Air Defense Command to be the start of a Soviet nuclear attack. The third also exploded, the main hull of the booster reentering the atmosphere on Christmas Day, followed a month later by the payload. The second, however, traveled 100 million kilometers away from Earth and went on to make the first flyby of Mars--though it was a mute witness to the event, as its transmitter failed, the same thing that happened two years later. The Soviets kept their defeats to themselves and trumpeted their successes--which were numerous enough to show that they had a decided lead over the Americans. They had reached practically every milestone in the Space Race: the first artificial satellite, the first animal in space, the first man, the first woman. They'd intentionally crashed a spacecraft into the moon and taken the first pictures of its far side, and they were now poised to claim the first spacewalk. The United States, by contrast, had successfully completed only one planetary mission, Mariner 2 to Venus. Worse, the Venus mission, the "Mission of Seven Miracles," had barely worked. It was a wonder that it had managed to collect any data at all, flying by the seat of its pants, "limping on one solar panel and heated to within an inch of its life." And getting to Venus was easier than getting to Mars. To reach the Red Planet, the spacecraft's systems had to stay alive for an extra hundred days, and the data had to be transmitted twice as far. Transistors were new and bulky, and the microchip had just been invented. The computing power of the whole spacecraft was no better than that of a pocket calculator, yet the spacecraft had to rely on a never-before-tested star tracker to point the way. For the first time in history, a NASA probe was drifting into the darkness, traveling away from everything bright in the night--the Earth, the moon, the sun. Just like Coleridge's ancient mariner, it was poised to be "the first that ever burst/Into that silent sea." Excerpted from The Sirens of Mars: Searching for Life on Another World by Sarah Stewart Johnson All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.