Is all well? The question is often asked, and for me, it's a question of what scale we are talking about. So let's go from large to small.
Universal scale
At the universal scale, we can say that all is well. The planets quietly make their trips around the sun, all in their own lane, at their own speed, and in their own self-defined years. Still, two of our neighbors, Mars and Jupiter's moon Europa, received more attention in the media last week.
On the Red Planet, NASA's Perseverance Rover had a good week; it broke the local speed record by driving a lightning tenth of a mile per hour across the bed of the Jezero crater. At this speed, the cute little explorer moved towards its new home for the next half (Earth) year. The first campaign on Mars, on the crater floor, has now officially ended, and the Delta Front Campaign officially started some ten days ago.
Perseverance is now on its way to a spot called Three Forks, where once a river flowed into a lake and where scientists hope that the now disappeared river has dropped the rocks that it transported. The rover will drill cores at several places, and hopefully, it finds at this location a treasure trove of deposited material that is usually out of reach for Perseverance. And if we are lucky, scientists may discover rocks with signs of ancient organisms. Just imagine that: finding indications of life on another planet; I find this fascinating.
Admittedly, we're not talking about exotic intelligent green creatures with some human characteristics that will welcome visitors from Earth (and why would they?). Instead, if Perseverance finds any sign of life on the dry planet, it will likely be dead and undoubtedly tiny. But still, finding traces of ancient dead microbes on another planet must be unique.
Life on Europa
And that is not all the space news of this week. Astrobiologists got excited this week about Europa. It is of the moons of Jupiter, which is a prime candidate for extraterrestrial habitability in our solar system. It is covered with many double ridges, and scientists still don't fully understand how these got all over the surface of this icy moon.
But this week, scientists presented in Nature Communications the discovery and analysis of a double ridge in Northwest Greenland that looks remarkably like the ones on Europa. However, this one is easier to study, and its geological formation is better understood. It was formed by successive refreezing, pressurization, and fracture of a shallow water sill within the ice sheet.
The scientists suggest that the same process may be responsible for Europa's double ridges and that shallow liquid water is spatially and temporally ubiquitous across Europa's ice shell. As we all learned at school (let me reformulate that: as we all should have learned at school in the same biology classes where every kid should have been taught about evolution), early microbial life on Earth evolved in the liquid saltwater. Add all this information up, and then the possibility of life on Europa suddenly looks more promising.
If there has ever been life on Mars, or if we would someday find life on Europa, the question pops up how it got there. And it seems we got one small step further in that quest as well. This week, an article was published about how scientists just found the two missing of the five informational units of DNA and RNA in meteorites. All DNA and RNA contain five informational components called nucleobases. Scientists had already found three of these in meteorites, but now a team of Japanese scientists found the missing two in extraterrestrial samples. This strengthens the theory that chemical reactions in asteroids could have provided essential building blocks for life on places like Earth, Mars, or Europa.
Living in Europe
But as I said in my opening, it's a question of scale when judging if today's news is good or bad. Although finding life on Europa sounds exciting, life in some parts of Europe on our planet is a terrible nightmare for millions. Every day, I am shocked, saddened, angry, and frustrated about the horrific events in Ukraine. And unfortunately, reading today's news doesn't give much hope for an end to the people's suffering.
Wars are always hard to understand, and this one is exemplary in that aspect; why? So let me give a word of advice to those microbes on icy Europa: stay put. And in case you have any evolutionary ambitions for the next billion years: be inspired by koalas, pandas, or cute little piglets. Don't develop your brain any further, don't believe that two legs are better; your moon will thank you for that.
The third scale: our lives
And before I leave you for tonight, I haven't forgotten about the third scale I mentioned. Zooming in from the solar system to the medium level of Earth and Ukraine, we can further zoom in to the third individual or local level. It's the level of you and me, everyday life experiences, and the community where you spent your time today. How was that for you?
For me, it was a lovely day, in striking contrast to the world news. It seems odd that, as I grow older, our planet feels so much smaller and more connected than in my youth. But when the world becomes a global village, it makes it harder to enjoy local happiness while Hell on Earth feels closer than ever before.
So tonight, if you ask me the opening question if all is well, I don't feel like sharing my joy of seeing the vibrant colors of spring replacing the brown remnants of winter in Ottawa. So instead, I will leave that for the following newsletter to separate the scales of seeing the universe, world, and local community we live in.
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Notes:
https://www.inverse.com/science/perseverance-second-science-campaign
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-022-29458-3
https://mars.nasa.gov/mars2020/mission/status/377/campaign-2-the-delta-front/
https://www.nasa.gov/feature/jpl/greenland-ice-jupiter-moon-share-similar-feature
This week I took steps on behalf of living responsibly on our planet. Beginning my project a few months ago by selling and donating many of my possessions, this week I sold my car, left Texas, moved back to Chicago in 300 sq ft surrounded by markets, vegan restaurants, art, nature, and all accessible by foot or cycling. Your work and your words are partially responsible. I am feeling hopeful. 🌍🌻🌷💙
A brilliant perspective of your deep reflections on the condition of our planet and beyond, as well as that of humanity. On one end of the scale all is fine so many light years away as you’ve rightly recognized but there are vast differences as we travel downward. It’s tempting to stay focused on the Europa end of the scale and contemplate those interesting findings and what they mean on distant planets and moons and how we may have gotten to our own Earth.
What is happening in our own realm of the scale gives far greater angst.
We’ve failed our planet to the point of desperation for its future. We’ve failed as a civilization allowing tyrants to control the fates of innocents and treat them like dispensable refuse. As Sec Gen Guterres said today, “War is evil” and we see that evil playing daily before us as the evil perpetrator threatens the world with nuclear war.
I agree it’s hard to enjoy the glories of burgeoning Spring when we see genocide of fellow humans and the destruction of a once beautiful and peaceful country.
Thank you for another journalistic excellence and also the fourth scale, classic beauty Luna, safe at home.