On August 6, 2012, the Curiosity rover touched down on the red planet. This is an opportunity for NASA and the National Center for Space Studies (CNES) to come back to the discoveries of the solitary robot. “Curiosity was sent to Mars to answer a big question: Were all the ingredients in place to support life?” described in a NASA video by Abigail Fraeman, Curiosity’s deputy project scientist. Ten years later, not only can we answer a definite yes, but we also discovered that these ingredients have been around for tens of millions of years. Knowing whether Mars was inhabited remains a mystery to be discovered, but it is now certain that it “presented the conditions favorable to the emergence of living things”, recalls on its site the Cité de l’Espace in Toulouse, where the Curiosity landing was broadcast live. “Searching for traces of past life (read: microbial) is a mission that has been entrusted to Curiosity’s successor twin, namely Perseverance, equipped with specific instruments for this task. “, she continues.

Ten years after its risky yet soft landing in the Gale crater at the foot of Mount Sharp, Curiosity “has so far traveled 28.4km, drilled 35 times and climbed over 612m of vertical drop”, lists CNES in a thread. Twitter. To carry out its research, the rover is equipped in particular with two French instruments: ChemCam (laser, spectrometer and camera), and SAM (sample analyzer).

Curiosity will collect clues over the years that will allow the discovery of a dry lake, which once submerged the crater. “Measurements from Curiosity instruments have shown that Mars was habitable probably a little over 3/4 billion years ago,” says the Cité de l’Espace. Since then, Curiosity has discovered several traces of organic molecules, without being able to link them to traces of life. Its objective for the next few years, according to CNES, is to “draw ever higher on the side of Mount Sharp in the hope of revealing the last chapters of the history of Mars and its drying up. »