European space agency launches joint mission to hunt for signs of life in Mars
The Proton-M rocket, carrying the ExoMars 2016 spacecraft to Mars, blasts off from the launchpad at the Baikonur cosmodrome, Kazakhstan, March 14, 2016 (Reuters Photo)


Europe and Russia have launched a joint mission to explore the atmosphere of Mars and hunt for signs of life on the red planet.The unmanned ExoMars probe a collaboration between the European Space Agency and Roscosmos took off Monday aboard a Russian rocket and is expected to reach Mars in October.The probe's Trace Gas Orbiter will analyze methane and other gases in the Martian atmosphere to determine where they are coming from, said Paolo Ferri, ESA's head of mission operations.Methane is created by biological or geological activity and breaks down within a relatively short period of time once it reaches the atmosphere."It cannot be older than 400 years. That means there has been either biological or geological activity in this timeframe," said Ferri. "Four hundred years is nothing. If there is methane it means there is basically a process going on now."The prospect of finding life on Mars even microscopic organisms has excited scientists for some time, but so far none has been discovered."The fact that they've not found life doesn't mean certainly that there's no life there," said Ferri, noting that much of the planet's vast surface hasn't yet been closely examined.That task will fall to a rover ESA plans to send to Mars in 2018. Until then, the orbiter will have time to find a good landing spot and conduct a test run using a trial lander called Schiaparelli that's already on board the probe.If life is discovered, it actually raises questions about whether future manned missions to the planet should be attempted, said Mark McCaughrean, senior science adviser at ESA."Weirdly, if we find life on Mars is actually really begs the question if we should go at all with human beings because of that idea of planetary protection," he said at ESA mission control in Darmstadt. "We would take with us bugs, and if now those bugs meet martian bugs, that could be a disaster."