1
00:00:49,455 --> 00:00:50,820
SAGAN:
Martians.

2
00:00:51,023 --> 00:00:54,720
Why so many speculations
and fantasies about Martians...

3
00:00:54,927 --> 00:00:59,057
...rather than Saturnians, say,
or Plutonians?

4
00:00:59,265 --> 00:01:02,632
Because Mars seems,
at first glance, very Earth-like.

5
00:01:02,835 --> 00:01:05,395
It's the nearest planet
whose surface we can see.

6
00:01:05,604 --> 00:01:08,471
There are polar icecaps,
drifting white clouds...

7
00:01:08,674 --> 00:01:11,905
...raging dust storms,
seasonally changing patterns...

8
00:01:12,111 --> 00:01:13,635
...even a 24-hour day.

9
00:01:13,846 --> 00:01:18,010
It's tempting to think of it
as an inhabited world.

10
00:01:19,451 --> 00:01:23,285
Mars has become
a kind of mythic arena...

11
00:01:23,489 --> 00:01:27,755
...onto which we've projected
our earthly hopes and fears.

12
00:01:27,960 --> 00:01:31,521
The most tantalizing myths
about Mars have proved wrong.

13
00:01:31,730 --> 00:01:34,995
So a few people have swung
to the opposite extreme...

14
00:01:35,200 --> 00:01:38,169
...and concluded that
the planet is of little interest.

15
00:01:38,370 --> 00:01:41,771
They've begun to sing
blues for the Red Planet.

16
00:01:41,974 --> 00:01:45,068
But the real Mars is
a world of wonders.

17
00:01:45,277 --> 00:01:49,077
Its future prospects are
far more intriguing...

18
00:01:49,281 --> 00:01:51,511
...than our past apprehensions
about it.

19
00:01:51,717 --> 00:01:55,380
In our time, we have sifted
the sands of Mars...

20
00:01:55,588 --> 00:01:57,522
...established a presence there...

21
00:01:57,723 --> 00:02:00,920
...and fulfilled a century of dreams.

22
00:02:06,599 --> 00:02:10,968
The most startling dream of Mars
was that of H.G. Wells...

23
00:02:11,170 --> 00:02:15,800
...who in 1897 wrote
The War of the Worlds.

24
00:02:16,809 --> 00:02:20,472
NARRATOR: "No one would have believed
in the end of the 19th century...

25
00:02:20,679 --> 00:02:24,581
...that this world was being
watched keenly and closely...

26
00:02:24,783 --> 00:02:27,775
...by intelligences
greater than man's...

27
00:02:27,987 --> 00:02:30,547
...and yet as mortal as his own.

28
00:03:05,290 --> 00:03:09,659
As men busied themselves
about their various concerns...

29
00:03:09,862 --> 00:03:11,989
...they were scrutinized
and studied...

30
00:03:12,431 --> 00:03:14,695
...perhaps almost
as narrowly as a man...

31
00:03:14,900 --> 00:03:17,300
...with a microscope
might scrutinize...

32
00:03:17,503 --> 00:03:20,495
...the transient creatures
that swarm and multiply...

33
00:03:20,706 --> 00:03:22,571
...in a drop of water.

34
00:03:35,421 --> 00:03:39,585
With infinite complacency,
men went to and fro over this globe...

35
00:03:39,792 --> 00:03:41,726
...about their little affairs...

36
00:03:42,394 --> 00:03:46,455
...serene in their assurance
of their empire over matter.

37
00:03:47,833 --> 00:03:52,202
It's possible that the infusoria
under the microscope do the same.

38
00:03:52,671 --> 00:03:55,731
(CHILDREN SINGING)

39
00:04:10,322 --> 00:04:12,813
No one thought of
the older worlds of space...

40
00:04:13,025 --> 00:04:14,890
...as sources of human danger...

41
00:04:15,427 --> 00:04:18,863
...or thought of them only to dismiss
the idea of life upon them...

42
00:04:19,064 --> 00:04:21,726
...as impossible or improbable.

43
00:04:35,314 --> 00:04:36,679
(CLAPPING)

44
00:04:48,660 --> 00:04:50,992
It is curious to recall...

45
00:04:51,196 --> 00:04:54,757
...some of the mental habits
of those departed days.

46
00:04:56,335 --> 00:04:58,462
At most, terrestrial men fancied...

47
00:04:58,670 --> 00:05:02,936
...there might be other men upon Mars,
perhaps inferior to themselves...

48
00:05:03,142 --> 00:05:06,111
...and ready to welcome
a missionary enterprise.

49
00:05:10,048 --> 00:05:12,141
Yet across the gulf of space...

50
00:05:12,351 --> 00:05:15,843
...intellects vast
and cool and unsympathetic...

51
00:05:16,054 --> 00:05:18,181
...regarded this Earth
with envious eyes...

52
00:05:18,757 --> 00:05:23,285
...and slowly and surely
drew their plans against us."

53
00:05:33,038 --> 00:05:35,063
(CHEERING)

54
00:05:39,912 --> 00:05:43,177
SAGAN: Wells' novel captured
the popular imagination...

55
00:05:43,382 --> 00:05:45,612
...in the late Victorian era.

56
00:05:45,818 --> 00:05:48,878
This was a time when
the automobile was a novelty...

57
00:05:49,087 --> 00:05:50,554
...when the pace of life...

58
00:05:50,756 --> 00:05:53,350
...was still determined
by the speed of the horse.

59
00:05:53,559 --> 00:05:57,723
Into this world, Wells introduced
an interplanetary fantasy...

60
00:05:58,063 --> 00:06:02,159
...with spaceships, ray guns
and implacable aliens.

61
00:06:02,367 --> 00:06:06,531
These were original
and disquieting possibilities.

62
00:06:09,541 --> 00:06:11,805
The Martians of H.G. Wells...

63
00:06:12,010 --> 00:06:15,639
...were not merely minor variations
on a human theme.

64
00:06:15,848 --> 00:06:18,874
Instead, they were
the evolutionary product...

65
00:06:19,084 --> 00:06:22,383
...of a totally alien environment.

66
00:06:30,696 --> 00:06:33,790
Forty years later,
this fantasy was still able...

67
00:06:33,999 --> 00:06:38,436
...to frighten millions
in war-jittery America...

68
00:06:38,637 --> 00:06:42,664
...when it was dramatized for radio
by the young Orson Welles.

69
00:06:50,048 --> 00:06:52,915
A few years before
The War of the Worlds was published...

70
00:06:53,118 --> 00:06:55,382
...another, quite different
vision of Martians...

71
00:06:55,587 --> 00:06:57,885
...was forming in the mind
of a wealthy Bostonian...

72
00:06:58,090 --> 00:07:00,115
...named Percival Lowell.

73
00:07:02,594 --> 00:07:05,563
The Martians of H.G. Wells
were a way for the novelist...

74
00:07:05,764 --> 00:07:09,530
...to examine contemporary society
through alien eyes.

75
00:07:09,735 --> 00:07:13,671
But the Martians of Percival Lowell
were, he believed...

76
00:07:13,872 --> 00:07:15,430
...very real.

77
00:07:19,478 --> 00:07:23,938
It was here that
the most elaborate claims...

78
00:07:24,149 --> 00:07:27,516
...in support of life on Mars
were developed.

79
00:07:31,590 --> 00:07:35,617
Lowell dabbled in astronomy
as a young man.

80
00:07:40,799 --> 00:07:43,427
He went off to Harvard.

81
00:07:46,571 --> 00:07:50,268
He had a semiofficial
diplomatic appointment to Korea...

82
00:07:52,978 --> 00:07:55,469
...and otherwise engaged
in the usual pursuits...

83
00:07:55,681 --> 00:07:58,081
...of the wealthy for his time.

84
00:07:59,017 --> 00:08:01,918
But his lifelong love...

85
00:08:02,287 --> 00:08:04,983
...was the planet Mars.

86
00:08:06,425 --> 00:08:08,916
Lowell was electrified...

87
00:08:09,127 --> 00:08:12,187
...by the announcement in 1877...

88
00:08:12,397 --> 00:08:15,457
...by an Italian astronomer,
Giovanni Schiaparelli...

89
00:08:15,667 --> 00:08:18,693
...of canali on Mars.

90
00:08:19,338 --> 00:08:21,772
Schiaparelli had reported...

91
00:08:21,974 --> 00:08:24,841
...during a close approach
of Mars to the Earth...

92
00:08:25,043 --> 00:08:28,706
...an intricate network of
single and double straight lines...

93
00:08:28,914 --> 00:08:32,941
...crisscrossing
the bright areas of Mars.

94
00:08:34,953 --> 00:08:38,582
Now, canali in Italian
means "channels" or "grooves"...

95
00:08:38,790 --> 00:08:43,022
...but it was promptly translated
into English as canals...

96
00:08:43,228 --> 00:08:46,197
...a word which understandably has...

97
00:08:46,398 --> 00:08:49,333
...a certain implication
of intelligent design.

98
00:08:49,768 --> 00:08:53,864
A Mars-mania swept through
Europe and America...

99
00:08:54,072 --> 00:08:57,803
...and Percival Lowell found
himself caught up in it.

100
00:08:59,511 --> 00:09:02,810
In 1892, his eyesight failing...

101
00:09:03,015 --> 00:09:07,679
...Schiaparelli announced
he was giving up observing Mars.

102
00:09:09,488 --> 00:09:12,889
Lowell resolved
to continue the work.

103
00:09:14,426 --> 00:09:16,587
(ROOF CREAKS)

104
00:09:18,897 --> 00:09:21,991
He wanted
a first-rate observing site...

105
00:09:22,367 --> 00:09:25,928
...undisturbed by clouds
or city lights...

106
00:09:26,138 --> 00:09:28,197
...and marked by good seeing.

107
00:09:28,407 --> 00:09:32,241
"Seeing" is the astronomer's term
for a steady atmosphere...

108
00:09:32,444 --> 00:09:35,743
...through which the shimmering
of an astronomical image...

109
00:09:35,947 --> 00:09:37,778
...in the telescope is minimized.

110
00:09:45,290 --> 00:09:48,782
Lowell built his observatory
far away from home...

111
00:09:48,994 --> 00:09:53,863
...on Mars Hill,
here in Flagstaff, Arizona.

112
00:10:10,549 --> 00:10:14,918
Lowell sketched
the surface features of Mars...

113
00:10:15,620 --> 00:10:19,522
...and particularly the canals,
which mesmerized him.

114
00:10:19,858 --> 00:10:23,419
Now, observations of this sort
aren't easy.

115
00:10:23,628 --> 00:10:26,119
You put in long hours
at the telescope...

116
00:10:26,331 --> 00:10:28,390
...in the chill of the early morning.

117
00:10:28,600 --> 00:10:31,398
Most of the time,
the seeing is crummy.

118
00:10:31,603 --> 00:10:33,400
When the seeing is bad...

119
00:10:33,605 --> 00:10:36,574
...the image of Mars
blurs and distorts...

120
00:10:36,775 --> 00:10:39,266
...and you have to ignore
what you've observed.

121
00:10:39,478 --> 00:10:43,778
But occasionally the image steadies
and the features of the planet...

122
00:10:43,982 --> 00:10:47,042
...marvelously flash out at you.

123
00:10:47,252 --> 00:10:49,311
You must then remember
what you've seen...

124
00:10:49,521 --> 00:10:51,580
...and accurately commit it to paper.

125
00:10:51,790 --> 00:10:54,281
You must put
your preconceptions aside...

126
00:10:54,493 --> 00:10:57,326
...and with an open mind,
set down the wonders...

127
00:10:57,529 --> 00:10:59,929
...that Mars holds in store for us.

128
00:11:00,132 --> 00:11:03,727
This is Percival Lowell's
own notebook.

129
00:11:03,935 --> 00:11:06,495
Here's what he thought he saw.

130
00:11:07,506 --> 00:11:11,374
Bright and dark areas,
a hint of a polar cap...

131
00:11:11,643 --> 00:11:15,101
...and canals.
Lots and lots of canals.

132
00:11:20,886 --> 00:11:22,353
Lowell believed...

133
00:11:22,954 --> 00:11:27,584
...that he was seeing
a globe-girdling network...

134
00:11:27,792 --> 00:11:30,260
...of great irrigation canals...

135
00:11:30,462 --> 00:11:33,329
...carrying water
from the melting polar caps...

136
00:11:33,532 --> 00:11:36,660
...to the thirsty inhabitants
of the equatorial cities.

137
00:11:37,235 --> 00:11:39,897
He believed
the planet was inhabited...

138
00:11:40,105 --> 00:11:42,232
...by an older and wiser race...

139
00:11:42,440 --> 00:11:45,102
...perhaps very different from us.

140
00:11:45,310 --> 00:11:46,402
He believed...

141
00:11:46,611 --> 00:11:49,705
...that the seasonal changes
in the dark areas...

142
00:11:49,915 --> 00:11:53,373
...were due to the growth
and decay of vegetation.

143
00:11:53,585 --> 00:11:56,850
He believed that
the planet was Earth-like.

144
00:11:59,224 --> 00:12:02,352
All in all, he believed too much.

145
00:12:12,804 --> 00:12:16,467
Lowell's Martians were a dying race.

146
00:12:16,675 --> 00:12:19,906
Their once-great cities
had fallen into ruins.

147
00:12:20,111 --> 00:12:23,205
Lowell believed that
the Martian climate was changing...

148
00:12:23,415 --> 00:12:26,612
...that the precious water
was trickling away into space...

149
00:12:26,818 --> 00:12:30,185
...that the planet
was becoming a desert world.

150
00:12:30,388 --> 00:12:34,324
The canals, he thought,
were a last desperate measure...

151
00:12:34,526 --> 00:12:39,190
...a heroic engineering effort
to conserve the scarce water.

152
00:12:39,397 --> 00:12:43,231
But their technology, although
far more advanced than ours...

153
00:12:43,435 --> 00:12:47,769
...was inadequate to stem
a planetary catastrophe.

154
00:13:32,751 --> 00:13:36,380
The most serious contemporary
challenge to Lowell's ideas...

155
00:13:36,588 --> 00:13:38,317
...came from an unlikely source:

156
00:13:38,523 --> 00:13:41,185
The biologist Alfred Russel Wallace...

157
00:13:41,393 --> 00:13:44,385
...co-discoverer of evolution
by natural selection.

158
00:13:44,596 --> 00:13:47,622
Wallace correctly showed
that the air on Mars...

159
00:13:47,832 --> 00:13:49,993
...was much too cold and thin...

160
00:13:50,201 --> 00:13:52,465
...to permit the existence
of liquid water.

161
00:13:52,671 --> 00:13:56,334
He wrote that
"only a race of madmen...

162
00:13:56,541 --> 00:13:59,476
...would build canals
under such conditions."

163
00:14:01,579 --> 00:14:05,310
Lowell's Martians
were benign and hopeful...

164
00:14:05,517 --> 00:14:07,348
...even a little godlike...

165
00:14:07,552 --> 00:14:10,214
...very different
from the malevolent menace...

166
00:14:10,422 --> 00:14:14,950
...posed by H.G. Wells and Orson
Welles in The War of the Worlds.

167
00:14:15,260 --> 00:14:18,889
Both sets of ideas passed
into the public imagination...

168
00:14:19,097 --> 00:14:21,895
...through Sunday supplements
and science fiction...

169
00:14:22,300 --> 00:14:26,464
...and excited generations
of 8-year-olds into fantasizing...

170
00:14:26,671 --> 00:14:29,663
...that they themselves
might one day voyage...

171
00:14:29,874 --> 00:14:31,899
...to the distant planet Mars.

172
00:14:33,345 --> 00:14:35,711
I remember reading
with breathless fascination...

173
00:14:35,914 --> 00:14:38,405
...the Mars novels
of Edgar Rice Burroughs.

174
00:14:38,616 --> 00:14:40,811
I journeyed with John Carter...

175
00:14:41,019 --> 00:14:43,715
...gentleman adventurer
from Virginia...

176
00:14:43,922 --> 00:14:48,052
...to Barsoom, as Mars
was known by its inhabitants.

177
00:14:48,960 --> 00:14:53,158
Wandering among the beasts
of burden called thoats...

178
00:14:53,365 --> 00:14:56,095
...winning the hand of
the lovely Dejah Thoris...

179
00:14:56,301 --> 00:14:58,428
...Princess of Helium...

180
00:14:58,636 --> 00:15:02,834
...and befriending
a 10-foot-high green fighting man...

181
00:15:03,041 --> 00:15:04,633
...named Tars Tarkas...

182
00:15:04,843 --> 00:15:08,506
...as the moons of Mars
hurtled overhead...

183
00:15:08,713 --> 00:15:11,204
...on a summer's evening on Barsoom.

184
00:15:43,081 --> 00:15:46,244
It aroused generations
of 8-year-olds...

185
00:15:46,451 --> 00:15:47,713
...myself among them...

186
00:15:47,919 --> 00:15:51,286
...to consider the exploration of
the planets as a real possibility...

187
00:15:51,489 --> 00:15:55,516
...to wonder whether we ourselves
might one day venture...

188
00:15:55,727 --> 00:15:58,161
...to the distant planet Mars.

189
00:15:58,363 --> 00:16:02,265
John Carter got to Barsoom
by standing in an open field...

190
00:16:02,467 --> 00:16:06,665
...spreading his hands
and wishing hard at Mars.

191
00:16:06,871 --> 00:16:10,637
I can remember spending
many an hour in my boyhood...

192
00:16:10,842 --> 00:16:13,402
...arms resolutely outstretched...

193
00:16:13,611 --> 00:16:16,478
...in an open field in twilight...

194
00:16:16,681 --> 00:16:21,482
...imploring what I believed
to be Mars to transport me there.

195
00:16:22,187 --> 00:16:23,848
It never worked.

196
00:16:24,155 --> 00:16:26,521
There had to be some better way.

197
00:16:27,992 --> 00:16:31,587
And there was.
The real road to Mars was opened...

198
00:16:31,796 --> 00:16:33,764
...by a boy who loved skyrockets.

199
00:16:35,099 --> 00:16:36,794
(BAND PLAYS)

200
00:16:47,812 --> 00:16:50,838
Fourth of July celebrations
in New England...

201
00:16:51,049 --> 00:16:54,177
...are much the same today
as they were in the 1890s.

202
00:17:10,935 --> 00:17:14,928
Then, as now, the highlight
of the day's festivities...

203
00:17:15,139 --> 00:17:17,869
...was a rousing fireworks display.

204
00:17:24,682 --> 00:17:28,778
That was the part that
Robert Goddard liked the best.

205
00:17:30,121 --> 00:17:33,557
By the time he was 16,
he was launching his own rockets.

206
00:17:34,759 --> 00:17:36,283
He wrote in his diary:

207
00:17:36,494 --> 00:17:39,725
"July 4, 1898:

208
00:17:40,064 --> 00:17:43,124
Fired cannon
and firecrackers all day.

209
00:17:43,334 --> 00:17:46,167
In evening, had five rockets."

210
00:17:46,371 --> 00:17:48,896
- You gonna light it now?
- Yes, I am.

211
00:17:58,416 --> 00:17:59,849
Wow!

212
00:18:00,351 --> 00:18:01,443
That same year...

213
00:18:01,786 --> 00:18:05,517
...The War of the Worlds was being
serialized in the Boston Post.

214
00:18:05,723 --> 00:18:08,556
Goddard eagerly read every word.

215
00:18:12,864 --> 00:18:15,389
The Boston newspapers
were also reporting...

216
00:18:15,600 --> 00:18:18,398
...intriguing conjectures
by a Professor Lowell...

217
00:18:18,603 --> 00:18:21,367
...whose lectures
Goddard would later attend.

218
00:18:29,614 --> 00:18:33,345
The images of Mars spun
by Wells and Lowell...

219
00:18:33,551 --> 00:18:35,815
...beguiled the young Goddard...

220
00:18:37,221 --> 00:18:38,882
...and at age 17...

221
00:18:39,090 --> 00:18:41,615
...on October 19, 1899...

222
00:18:41,826 --> 00:18:44,659
...they crystallized
into an overwhelming vision...

223
00:18:44,862 --> 00:18:48,855
...that provided the direction
and purpose of his life.

224
00:18:55,840 --> 00:18:57,569
From the high branches...

225
00:18:57,775 --> 00:19:00,972
...of an old cherry tree
on his family's farm...

226
00:19:01,179 --> 00:19:06,048
...Goddard saw a way to do more
than just speculate about Mars.

227
00:19:14,759 --> 00:19:17,227
Before anyone had ever flown
in an airplane...

228
00:19:17,428 --> 00:19:19,487
...or listened to a radio...

229
00:19:19,697 --> 00:19:23,064
...Goddard decided
to invent a machine...

230
00:19:23,267 --> 00:19:26,828
...that would voyage
to the planet Mars.

231
00:19:58,770 --> 00:20:02,262
For the rest of his life, he was
to commemorate that October day...

232
00:20:02,473 --> 00:20:04,964
...as his anniversary day...

233
00:20:05,176 --> 00:20:07,974
...the birthday of his great dream.

234
00:20:12,583 --> 00:20:16,781
By the 1920s, after years of
studying physics and engineering...

235
00:20:16,988 --> 00:20:20,924
...he was experimenting
with liquid fuel rockets.

236
00:20:34,072 --> 00:20:37,439
In order to build a rocket capable
of reaching high altitudes...

237
00:20:37,642 --> 00:20:41,840
...Goddard had to create the principles
of an entirely new technology.

238
00:20:42,046 --> 00:20:44,105
He invented the basic components...

239
00:20:44,315 --> 00:20:46,715
...that propel, stabilize...

240
00:20:46,918 --> 00:20:49,409
...and guide the modern rocket.

241
00:21:06,838 --> 00:21:09,671
It was painstaking and difficult work.

242
00:21:09,874 --> 00:21:13,139
But Goddard took
the many setbacks in stride.

243
00:21:16,247 --> 00:21:18,715
He sifted the wreckage
of each experiment...

244
00:21:18,916 --> 00:21:21,384
...for clues to guide the next.

245
00:21:23,554 --> 00:21:27,251
Constantly refining old techniques
and inventing new ones...

246
00:21:27,458 --> 00:21:31,861
...he gradually raised the rocket
from a dangerous toy...

247
00:21:32,230 --> 00:21:35,893
...and set it on its way to becoming
an interplanetary vehicle.

248
00:21:48,112 --> 00:21:51,013
Goddard died in 1945...

249
00:21:51,215 --> 00:21:53,706
...before a rocket had ever
left the planet Earth.

250
00:21:53,918 --> 00:21:56,318
Although Mars always
remained his objective...

251
00:21:56,521 --> 00:21:59,581
...Goddard knew that such a goal
would be ridiculed.

252
00:21:59,791 --> 00:22:03,989
In public he advocated
the more modest objective...

253
00:22:04,195 --> 00:22:06,527
...of flying to the moon.

254
00:22:11,068 --> 00:22:14,799
Those boyhood dreams of voyages
to the moon and Mars...

255
00:22:15,006 --> 00:22:17,566
...shared by Goddard
with his contemporary...

256
00:22:17,775 --> 00:22:21,176
...a Russian scientist named
Konstantin Tsiolkovsky...

257
00:22:21,379 --> 00:22:25,713
...were fulfilled only
a few decades after their deaths.

258
00:22:25,917 --> 00:22:30,149
But as it turned out, the first
planet to be explored by rocket...

259
00:22:30,354 --> 00:22:31,651
...was the Earth.

260
00:22:41,566 --> 00:22:43,591
Now, imagine yourself a visitor...

261
00:22:43,801 --> 00:22:46,429
...from some other
and quite alien planet.

262
00:22:46,637 --> 00:22:49,333
You approach the Earth
with no preconceptions.

263
00:22:49,540 --> 00:22:53,032
Is the place inhabited?
At what point can you decide?

264
00:22:53,244 --> 00:22:56,338
When we look at the whole Earth,
there are no signs of life.

265
00:22:56,547 --> 00:22:59,141
We must examine it more closely.

266
00:22:59,350 --> 00:23:02,945
If there are intelligent beings,
maybe they create structures...

267
00:23:03,154 --> 00:23:06,180
...which can be seen at
a resolution of a few kilometers.

268
00:23:06,390 --> 00:23:08,483
Yet at this level of detail...

269
00:23:08,693 --> 00:23:12,094
...even a great river valley
seems utterly lifeless.

270
00:23:12,630 --> 00:23:14,257
There is no sign of life...

271
00:23:14,465 --> 00:23:17,127
...intelligent or otherwise
in Washington, D. C...

272
00:23:18,469 --> 00:23:19,936
...or Moscow...

273
00:23:22,240 --> 00:23:23,764
...or Tokyo...

274
00:23:25,142 --> 00:23:26,040
...or Peking.

275
00:23:26,244 --> 00:23:29,543
If there are intelligent beings,
they have not much modified...

276
00:23:29,747 --> 00:23:33,615
...the landscape into geometrical
patterns at kilometer resolution.

277
00:23:33,818 --> 00:23:36,787
But when we improve
the resolution tenfold...

278
00:23:36,988 --> 00:23:40,014
...when we see detail
as small as 100 meters across...

279
00:23:40,224 --> 00:23:41,851
...the size of a football field...

280
00:23:42,059 --> 00:23:43,959
...the situation changes.

281
00:23:48,599 --> 00:23:52,433
Many places on Earth seem suddenly
to crystallize out...

282
00:23:52,637 --> 00:23:56,164
...revealing an intricate pattern
of straight lines...

283
00:23:56,374 --> 00:24:00,333
...squares, rectangles and circles.

284
00:24:04,916 --> 00:24:08,682
Canals, roads,
circular irrigation patterns...

285
00:24:08,886 --> 00:24:11,855
...all suggest intelligent life
with a passion...

286
00:24:12,056 --> 00:24:15,423
...for Euclidean geometry
and territoriality.

287
00:24:15,626 --> 00:24:18,925
On this scale,
intelligent life can be discerned.

288
00:24:19,130 --> 00:24:20,256
Boston...

289
00:24:21,432 --> 00:24:23,195
...and Washington...

290
00:24:25,336 --> 00:24:26,394
...and New York.

291
00:24:26,604 --> 00:24:30,802
At 10-meter resolution, we also
discover that the Earthlings...

292
00:24:31,008 --> 00:24:32,873
...like to build up.

293
00:24:36,580 --> 00:24:39,549
At twilight or night,
other things are visible:

294
00:24:39,750 --> 00:24:42,378
Oil well fires in the Persian Gulf...

295
00:24:42,753 --> 00:24:45,347
...or the bright lights
of large cities.

296
00:24:46,590 --> 00:24:49,650
At a meter resolution,
we make out individual organisms:

297
00:24:49,860 --> 00:24:52,226
Seals on ice floes...

298
00:24:53,130 --> 00:24:55,394
...or people on skis.

299
00:24:58,569 --> 00:25:02,005
Intelligent life on Earth
first reveals itself...

300
00:25:02,206 --> 00:25:05,767
...through the geometric regularity
of its constructions.

301
00:25:05,977 --> 00:25:09,003
If Lowell's canal network existed,
the conclusion that...

302
00:25:09,213 --> 00:25:13,172
...intelligent beings inhabit
that planet might be compelling.

303
00:25:13,384 --> 00:25:15,818
But there is no canal network.

304
00:25:16,020 --> 00:25:19,046
Our unmanned spacecraft
have examined Mars...

305
00:25:19,256 --> 00:25:21,816
...with 1000 times more detail...

306
00:25:22,026 --> 00:25:26,326
...than any fleeting glimpse available
through Percival Lowell's telescope.

307
00:25:26,530 --> 00:25:30,398
There is no question that his Martian
canals were of intelligent origin.

308
00:25:30,601 --> 00:25:32,091
The only question was...

309
00:25:32,303 --> 00:25:35,636
...which side of the telescope
the intelligence was on.

310
00:25:35,840 --> 00:25:40,470
Where we have strong emotions,
we are liable to fool ourselves.

311
00:25:40,678 --> 00:25:45,012
Yet even without the canals,
the exploration of Mars evokes...

312
00:25:45,216 --> 00:25:47,377
...the kind of rapture that...

313
00:25:47,585 --> 00:25:50,713
...Columbus or Marco Polo
must have felt.

314
00:25:53,591 --> 00:25:55,559
We see many impact craters...

315
00:25:55,760 --> 00:25:59,560
...but we find no canals.
None at all.

316
00:26:00,431 --> 00:26:02,661
There are fault lines
in the surface...

317
00:26:02,867 --> 00:26:06,564
...and complex patterns
of ridges and valleys...

318
00:26:06,771 --> 00:26:10,229
...but they're all far too small
and in the wrong places...

319
00:26:10,441 --> 00:26:12,170
...to be Lowell's canals.

320
00:26:12,376 --> 00:26:15,436
And they don't seem
to be manufactured.

321
00:26:17,081 --> 00:26:18,708
There are many signs of water.

322
00:26:18,916 --> 00:26:22,579
Ancient river valleys wind
their way among the craters.

323
00:26:22,787 --> 00:26:25,915
Nergal Valley, named
after the Babylonian war god...

324
00:26:26,123 --> 00:26:30,287
...is 1000 kilometers long
and a billion years old.

325
00:26:30,494 --> 00:26:32,325
There seems to have been a time...

326
00:26:32,530 --> 00:26:35,693
...when Mars was warmer
and wetter than it is today.

327
00:26:36,901 --> 00:26:39,734
I wonder if life ever arose...

328
00:26:39,937 --> 00:26:44,636
...in the muddy backwaters
of these great river systems.

329
00:26:45,810 --> 00:26:48,108
The waters flowed at the same time...

330
00:26:48,312 --> 00:26:52,305
...that the great volcanoes
of the Tharsis Plateau were made.

331
00:26:52,950 --> 00:26:57,011
Before the present continents
of Earth were formed...

332
00:26:57,221 --> 00:27:00,622
...it was a very lively epoch on Mars.

333
00:27:02,326 --> 00:27:04,590
Equally old is the Mariner Valley...

334
00:27:04,795 --> 00:27:08,162
...a strange, vast, mist-filled chasm.

335
00:27:08,365 --> 00:27:12,995
If it were on Earth, it would stretch
from New York to Los Angeles.

336
00:27:13,204 --> 00:27:16,833
Landslides and avalanches
are slowly eroding its walls...

337
00:27:17,041 --> 00:27:19,202
...which collapse
to the floor of the valley.

338
00:27:19,410 --> 00:27:22,243
There, the winds remove
the particles...

339
00:27:22,446 --> 00:27:25,472
...and create immense
sand dune fields.

340
00:27:26,951 --> 00:27:29,317
Signs of high winds are all over Mars.

341
00:27:29,520 --> 00:27:32,250
Often craters have,
trailing behind them...

342
00:27:32,456 --> 00:27:36,790
...long streaks of bright or dark
material, blown out by the winds...

343
00:27:36,994 --> 00:27:40,987
...natural weathervanes
on the Martian surface.

344
00:27:41,365 --> 00:27:44,300
For the sand to be blown about
in the thin Martian atmosphere...

345
00:27:44,502 --> 00:27:46,129
...the winds have to be fast...

346
00:27:46,337 --> 00:27:49,932
...sometimes approaching
half the speed of sound.

347
00:27:50,741 --> 00:27:54,507
But some of the patterns
are so odd and intricate...

348
00:27:54,712 --> 00:27:58,239
...that we cannot be sure
they're caused by windblown sand.

349
00:27:58,449 --> 00:28:02,112
And there are other strange markings:

350
00:28:02,319 --> 00:28:04,651
Furrowed ground, almost resembling...

351
00:28:04,855 --> 00:28:07,915
...a giant plowed field
a billion years old...

352
00:28:08,125 --> 00:28:11,390
...and one of the strangest
features on Mars...

353
00:28:11,595 --> 00:28:13,859
...the pyramids of Elysium...

354
00:28:14,064 --> 00:28:16,692
...10 times taller
than the pyramids of Egypt.

355
00:28:16,901 --> 00:28:20,132
Perhaps they're only mountains
sculpted by the fierce winds...

356
00:28:20,337 --> 00:28:23,306
...but perhaps they're something else.

357
00:28:32,650 --> 00:28:37,053
How marvelous it would be
to glide over the surface of Mars...

358
00:28:37,254 --> 00:28:39,848
...to fly over Olympus Mons...

359
00:28:40,057 --> 00:28:42,992
...the largest known volcano
in the solar system.

360
00:28:45,796 --> 00:28:47,855
The surface area of Mars
is exactly...

361
00:28:48,065 --> 00:28:50,590
...as large as
the land area of the Earth.

362
00:28:50,801 --> 00:28:54,760
It will be a long time before
this planet is thoroughly explored.

363
00:28:55,439 --> 00:28:59,273
The only canal of Percival Lowell
that corresponds to anything real...

364
00:28:59,476 --> 00:29:01,307
...is Mariner Valley.

365
00:29:02,246 --> 00:29:04,237
5000 kilometers long...

366
00:29:04,448 --> 00:29:06,678
...it's a little hard
to miss even from Earth.

367
00:29:06,884 --> 00:29:09,444
The Grand Canyon
of Arizona would fit...

368
00:29:09,653 --> 00:29:12,213
...into one of its minor tributaries.

369
00:29:12,423 --> 00:29:16,257
Someday we will careen
through the corridors...

370
00:29:16,460 --> 00:29:19,691
...of the Valley of the Mariners.

371
00:30:16,787 --> 00:30:20,348
To skim over
the sand dunes of Mars is...

372
00:30:20,557 --> 00:30:23,253
...as yet, only a dream.

373
00:30:36,106 --> 00:30:38,040
But we have, in fact...

374
00:30:38,242 --> 00:30:41,302
...sent robot emissaries to Mars.

375
00:30:41,512 --> 00:30:44,447
Their names are Viking 1...

376
00:30:44,682 --> 00:30:46,445
...and Viking 2.

377
00:30:47,184 --> 00:30:50,210
The problem was where to land them.

378
00:30:52,256 --> 00:30:56,158
We knew that the volcanoes
of Tharsis were too high.

379
00:30:56,360 --> 00:30:58,294
The thin Martian atmosphere
would not...

380
00:30:58,495 --> 00:31:01,259
...support our descent parachute.

381
00:31:01,465 --> 00:31:05,799
The great Mariner Valley was
too rough and unpredictable.

382
00:31:07,104 --> 00:31:09,129
The polar caps were too cold...

383
00:31:09,340 --> 00:31:12,332
...for the lander's nuclear
power plant to keep it warm.

384
00:31:12,676 --> 00:31:16,442
There were fascinating places
that were too high...

385
00:31:16,647 --> 00:31:19,673
...or too windy
or too hard or too soft...

386
00:31:19,883 --> 00:31:22,283
...or too rough or too cold.

387
00:31:23,053 --> 00:31:25,988
We worried about the safety
of every landing site.

388
00:31:26,190 --> 00:31:28,658
Perhaps we were too cautious.

389
00:31:28,859 --> 00:31:31,259
Eventually we selected two places.

390
00:31:31,462 --> 00:31:34,920
One, optimistically named Utopia...

391
00:31:35,132 --> 00:31:36,656
...for Viking 2...

392
00:31:36,867 --> 00:31:39,836
...and another,
8000 kilometers away...

393
00:31:40,037 --> 00:31:43,939
...not far from the confluents
of four great channels...

394
00:31:44,141 --> 00:31:46,166
...a landing site for Viking 1...

395
00:31:46,377 --> 00:31:48,675
...called Chryse...

396
00:31:49,113 --> 00:31:52,241
...Greek for "the land of gold."

397
00:31:58,021 --> 00:32:01,957
And so, after a voyage
of 100 million kilometers...

398
00:32:02,159 --> 00:32:04,719
...on July 20, 1976...

399
00:32:04,928 --> 00:32:07,658
...Viking 1 landed right on target...

400
00:32:07,865 --> 00:32:09,526
...in the Chryse Plain.

401
00:32:12,169 --> 00:32:15,070
It was less than 80 years
since Robert Goddard...

402
00:32:15,272 --> 00:32:16,830
...had his epiphanic vision...

403
00:32:17,040 --> 00:32:20,237
...in a cherry tree in Massachusetts.

404
00:32:31,722 --> 00:32:35,954
After hibernating for a year
during its interplanetary passage...

405
00:32:36,160 --> 00:32:39,721
...Viking reawakened on another world.

406
00:32:42,065 --> 00:32:44,431
The first thing it did
was to call home...

407
00:32:44,635 --> 00:32:47,297
...reporting a safe arrival.

408
00:32:48,572 --> 00:32:51,006
It began to rouse itself...

409
00:32:51,208 --> 00:32:53,870
...according to instructions
memorized earlier.

410
00:32:54,077 --> 00:32:58,070
First, it put out a finger
to test the Martian winds.

411
00:32:58,649 --> 00:33:01,117
Then, flexing its arm...

412
00:33:01,318 --> 00:33:04,549
...it flung off a protective glove.

413
00:33:05,722 --> 00:33:09,715
Next, Viking prepared
to sniff the air...

414
00:33:09,993 --> 00:33:12,018
...and taste the soil.

415
00:33:13,096 --> 00:33:14,222
Finally...

416
00:33:14,431 --> 00:33:17,992
...it opened its eyes for a look
at its new surroundings.

417
00:33:18,235 --> 00:33:20,533
(WHIRRING)

418
00:33:25,008 --> 00:33:29,604
Viking's first picture assignment
was to photograph its own foot.

419
00:33:29,980 --> 00:33:32,710
In case it were to sink
into Martian quicksand...

420
00:33:32,916 --> 00:33:35,578
...we wanted to know about it
before it disappeared.

421
00:33:35,819 --> 00:33:39,983
Back on Earth, we waited
breathlessly for the first images.

422
00:33:40,190 --> 00:33:44,490
Viking painted its picture
in vertical strokes, line by line...

423
00:33:44,695 --> 00:33:47,493
...until, with enormous relief,
we saw the footpad...

424
00:33:47,698 --> 00:33:50,360
...securely planted
in the Martian soil.

425
00:33:50,567 --> 00:33:55,504
This was the first image
ever returned from the surface of Mars.

426
00:34:01,211 --> 00:34:03,702
The cameras on each
Viking lander revealed...

427
00:34:03,914 --> 00:34:06,382
...a kind of rocky desert.

428
00:34:06,583 --> 00:34:08,380
Beyond the lander itself...

429
00:34:08,585 --> 00:34:10,416
...we saw for the first time...

430
00:34:10,621 --> 00:34:13,021
...the landscape of the Red Planet.

431
00:34:13,223 --> 00:34:16,886
It didn't look like an alien world.

432
00:34:17,227 --> 00:34:19,957
There were rocks and sand dunes...

433
00:34:20,163 --> 00:34:24,463
...and gently rolling hills
as natural and familiar...

434
00:34:24,668 --> 00:34:26,533
...as any landscape on Earth.

435
00:34:27,037 --> 00:34:31,098
Forever after, Mars would be a place.

436
00:34:36,914 --> 00:34:40,975
We found that the Martian air
was less than 1% as dense as ours...

437
00:34:41,184 --> 00:34:43,914
...and made mostly of carbon dioxide.

438
00:34:44,121 --> 00:34:46,885
There were smaller amounts
of nitrogen, argon...

439
00:34:47,090 --> 00:34:49,251
...water vapor and oxygen.

440
00:34:49,626 --> 00:34:52,561
There was almost no ozone.
So the surface wasn't protected...

441
00:34:52,763 --> 00:34:56,028
...from the sun's ultraviolet light
as it is on Earth.

442
00:34:56,833 --> 00:34:59,996
On the warmest days,
it was distinctly chilly...

443
00:35:00,203 --> 00:35:04,640
...and every night the temperatures
plunged to 100 below.

444
00:35:04,841 --> 00:35:09,778
In winter, the surface was dusted
with a thin layer of frost.

445
00:35:13,617 --> 00:35:17,849
The landing sites were chosen
because they were safe and flat.

446
00:35:18,255 --> 00:35:21,486
Even so, Viking revolutionized
our knowledge...

447
00:35:21,692 --> 00:35:23,660
...of this rusty world.

448
00:35:25,262 --> 00:35:27,890
I would, of course, have been
surprised to see...

449
00:35:28,098 --> 00:35:31,465
...a grizzled prospector emerge
from behind a dune...

450
00:35:31,668 --> 00:35:33,033
...leading his mule.

451
00:35:33,236 --> 00:35:37,570
Yet the idea seemed
strangely appropriate.

452
00:35:38,308 --> 00:35:40,242
But at least while we were watching...

453
00:35:40,444 --> 00:35:43,607
...no prospector wandered by.

454
00:35:48,418 --> 00:35:52,582
We studied with exceptional care
each picture the cameras radioed back.

455
00:35:52,789 --> 00:35:56,520
But there was no hint
of the canals of Barsoom...

456
00:35:56,727 --> 00:35:58,922
...no sultry princesses...

457
00:35:59,162 --> 00:36:03,155
...no 10-foot-tall
green fighting men...

458
00:36:03,934 --> 00:36:06,164
...no thoats, no footprints...

459
00:36:06,370 --> 00:36:09,339
...not even a cactus
or a kangaroo rat.

460
00:36:09,773 --> 00:36:13,265
Perhaps there was life
inside the rocks...

461
00:36:13,477 --> 00:36:15,035
...or under the ground.

462
00:36:15,512 --> 00:36:19,004
If so, it had left no traces.

463
00:36:25,589 --> 00:36:28,752
For most of its history,
the Earth had microbes...

464
00:36:28,959 --> 00:36:31,484
...but no living things
big enough to see.

465
00:36:32,162 --> 00:36:35,723
Perhaps the same is true for Mars.

466
00:36:52,849 --> 00:36:57,786
The Viking lander is a superbly
instrumented and designed machine.

467
00:36:58,522 --> 00:37:03,084
It extends human capabilities
to other and alien landscapes.

468
00:37:03,293 --> 00:37:07,525
By some standards, it's about
as smart as a grasshopper.

469
00:37:07,731 --> 00:37:10,894
By others, only as intelligent
as a bacterium.

470
00:37:11,101 --> 00:37:13,569
There's nothing demeaning
in these comparisons.

471
00:37:13,770 --> 00:37:18,036
It took nature hundreds of millions
of years to evolve a bacterium...

472
00:37:18,241 --> 00:37:20,539
...and billions of years
to make a grasshopper.

473
00:37:20,744 --> 00:37:23,235
With only a little experience
in this business...

474
00:37:23,447 --> 00:37:25,506
...we're getting pretty good at it.

475
00:37:27,517 --> 00:37:28,984
In both landing sites...

476
00:37:29,553 --> 00:37:32,386
...in Chryse and Utopia...

477
00:37:32,589 --> 00:37:35,854
...we've begun to dig
in the sands of Mars.

478
00:37:36,226 --> 00:37:38,660
On a very small scale,
such trenches...

479
00:37:38,862 --> 00:37:42,423
...are the first human engineering
works on another world.

480
00:37:53,643 --> 00:37:57,101
The robot arm
retrieves soil samples...

481
00:37:57,314 --> 00:38:00,841
...and deposits them
into several sifters.

482
00:38:02,185 --> 00:38:05,552
Then the soil is carried
to five experiments:

483
00:38:05,756 --> 00:38:07,587
Two on the chemistry of the soil...

484
00:38:07,791 --> 00:38:10,817
...and three to look
for microbial life.

485
00:38:12,129 --> 00:38:15,792
The Viking biology experiments
represent a pioneering first effort...

486
00:38:15,999 --> 00:38:18,297
...in the search for life
on another world.

487
00:38:18,502 --> 00:38:21,733
The results are
tantalizing, annoying...

488
00:38:21,938 --> 00:38:23,929
...provocative, stimulating...

489
00:38:24,141 --> 00:38:26,336
...and deeply ambiguous.

490
00:38:27,144 --> 00:38:29,908
By criteria established
before a launch...

491
00:38:30,113 --> 00:38:33,571
...two of the three Viking
microbiology experiments...

492
00:38:33,784 --> 00:38:36,753
...seem to have yielded
positive results.

493
00:38:36,953 --> 00:38:41,322
First, when Martian soil samples
are mixed together...

494
00:38:41,525 --> 00:38:43,755
...with an organic soup from Earth...

495
00:38:43,960 --> 00:38:47,760
...something in the soil
seems to have broken food down...

496
00:38:47,964 --> 00:38:51,127
...almost as if there were
little Martian microbes...

497
00:38:51,334 --> 00:38:54,394
...which metabolized, enjoyed...

498
00:38:54,604 --> 00:38:56,595
...the soup from Earth.

499
00:38:57,274 --> 00:39:00,175
Second, when gases from Earth...

500
00:39:00,377 --> 00:39:02,470
...were mixed together
with Martian soil...

501
00:39:03,280 --> 00:39:07,478
...something seems to have chemically
combined the gases with soil...

502
00:39:07,684 --> 00:39:10,585
...almost as if there were little
Martian microbes capable...

503
00:39:10,787 --> 00:39:15,383
...of synthesizing organic matter
from atmospheric gases.

504
00:39:15,592 --> 00:39:17,389
But the situation is complex.

505
00:39:17,594 --> 00:39:19,152
Mars is not the Earth.

506
00:39:19,362 --> 00:39:24,265
As the legacy of Percival Lowell
reminds us, we're liable to be fooled.

507
00:39:25,202 --> 00:39:28,137
Perhaps the ultraviolet light
from the sun...

508
00:39:28,338 --> 00:39:30,363
...strikes the Martian surface...

509
00:39:30,574 --> 00:39:34,977
...and makes some chemical
which can oxidize foodstuffs.

510
00:39:35,946 --> 00:39:38,540
Perhaps there is some catalyst
in the soil...

511
00:39:38,748 --> 00:39:42,548
...which can combine atmospheric gases
with the soil...

512
00:39:42,752 --> 00:39:45,084
...and make organic molecules.

513
00:39:45,722 --> 00:39:48,190
The red sands of Mars
were excavated...

514
00:39:48,391 --> 00:39:51,189
...seven times at
the two different landing sites...

515
00:39:51,487 --> 00:39:56,186
...as distant from each other
as Boston is from Baghdad.

516
00:39:56,926 --> 00:40:00,225
Whatever was giving these results
was probably all over Mars...

517
00:40:00,429 --> 00:40:04,297
...but was it life, or just
the chemistry of the soil?

518
00:40:04,667 --> 00:40:08,364
Studies suggest that a kind of clay
known to exist on Mars...

519
00:40:08,571 --> 00:40:12,701
...can serve as a catalyst to
accelerate in the absence of life...

520
00:40:12,908 --> 00:40:16,935
...chemical reactions which
resemble the activities of life.

521
00:40:19,081 --> 00:40:22,141
It may be that in the early history
of the Earth, before life...

522
00:40:22,351 --> 00:40:26,549
...there were little cycles,
chemical cycles running in the soil...

523
00:40:26,755 --> 00:40:29,849
...something like photosynthesis
and respiration...

524
00:40:30,059 --> 00:40:34,587
...which were then incorporated
by biology once life arose.

525
00:40:35,831 --> 00:40:40,530
There may be life elsewhere than
in the two small sites we examined.

526
00:40:40,736 --> 00:40:45,173
Or perhaps there's life
of a different sort all over Mars.

527
00:40:45,374 --> 00:40:49,003
Life is just a kind of chemistry
of sufficient complexity...

528
00:40:49,211 --> 00:40:51,975
...to permit reproduction
and evolution.

529
00:40:52,181 --> 00:40:55,048
I wonder if we'll ever find
a specimen of life based...

530
00:40:55,251 --> 00:40:57,116
...not on organic molecules...

531
00:40:57,319 --> 00:41:01,119
...but on something else,
something more exotic.

532
00:41:04,193 --> 00:41:07,856
The Viking experiments found
that the Martian soil is not...

533
00:41:08,063 --> 00:41:10,623
...loaded with organic remains...

534
00:41:10,833 --> 00:41:13,324
...of once living creatures.

535
00:41:13,536 --> 00:41:18,337
Maybe the surface's reactive chemistry
has destroyed organic molecules...

536
00:41:18,541 --> 00:41:20,304
...molecules based on carbon.

537
00:41:20,509 --> 00:41:22,409
Or maybe there's no life on Mars...

538
00:41:22,611 --> 00:41:25,978
...and all Viking found
was a funny soil chemistry.

539
00:41:26,181 --> 00:41:28,274
Or maybe there's life, okay...

540
00:41:28,484 --> 00:41:32,147
...but it's not based on organic
chemistry as much as life is on Earth.

541
00:41:33,389 --> 00:41:37,291
Personally, I don't think that's
a very likely possibility.

542
00:41:37,493 --> 00:41:40,826
I'm a carbon chauvinist.
I freely admit it.

543
00:41:41,030 --> 00:41:43,590
Carbon is tremendously abundant
in the cosmos...

544
00:41:43,799 --> 00:41:47,030
...and it makes marvelously complex
organic molecules...

545
00:41:47,236 --> 00:41:49,431
...that are terrifically
good for life.

546
00:41:49,638 --> 00:41:52,004
I'm also a water chauvinist.

547
00:41:52,207 --> 00:41:55,267
It's an ideal solvent
for organic molecules...

548
00:41:55,477 --> 00:41:59,243
...and it stays liquid over
a very wide range of temperatures.

549
00:41:59,448 --> 00:42:03,748
But sometimes I wonder,
could my fondness...

550
00:42:03,953 --> 00:42:06,922
...for these materials have
anything to do with the fact...

551
00:42:07,122 --> 00:42:09,352
...that I'm chiefly made up of them?

552
00:42:09,558 --> 00:42:14,086
Are we carbon and water-based because
these materials were abundant...

553
00:42:14,296 --> 00:42:16,764
...on the Earth at the time
of the origin of life?

554
00:42:16,966 --> 00:42:20,629
Might life elsewhere be based
on different stuff?

555
00:42:21,036 --> 00:42:22,799
(LIQUID GURGLES)

556
00:42:23,706 --> 00:42:27,904
I'm a collection of organic molecules
called Carl Sagan.

557
00:42:28,110 --> 00:42:31,204
You're a collection of almost
identical molecules...

558
00:42:31,413 --> 00:42:35,850
...with a different collective label.
But is that all?

559
00:42:36,051 --> 00:42:40,647
Is there nothing in here
but molecules?

560
00:42:40,889 --> 00:42:45,826
Some people find that idea
somehow demeaning to human dignity.

561
00:42:46,161 --> 00:42:50,393
But for myself, I find it
elevating and exhilarating...

562
00:42:50,599 --> 00:42:53,033
...to discover that we
live in a universe...

563
00:42:53,235 --> 00:42:56,966
...which permits the evolution
of molecular machines...

564
00:42:57,172 --> 00:43:00,767
...as intricate and subtle as we.

565
00:43:01,710 --> 00:43:06,272
The essence of life is not the atoms
and small molecules that go into us...

566
00:43:06,482 --> 00:43:09,349
...as the way, the ordering...

567
00:43:09,551 --> 00:43:12,179
...the way those molecules
are put together.

568
00:43:12,388 --> 00:43:14,879
Now, we sometimes read...

569
00:43:15,090 --> 00:43:18,150
...that the chemicals which make up
a human body are worth...

570
00:43:18,360 --> 00:43:22,296
...on the open market, only 97 cents
or $10, or some number like that.

571
00:43:22,631 --> 00:43:26,465
And it's depressing to find
our bodies valued at so little.

572
00:43:26,669 --> 00:43:29,331
But these estimates are for humans...

573
00:43:29,538 --> 00:43:33,065
...reduced to our simplest
possible components.

574
00:43:36,145 --> 00:43:39,273
What is all this stuff in front of me?

575
00:43:39,481 --> 00:43:44,009
These are exactly the atoms
that make up the human body...

576
00:43:44,219 --> 00:43:46,346
...and in the right proportions too.

577
00:43:46,555 --> 00:43:51,219
We're made mostly of water,
and that costs almost nothing.

578
00:43:51,427 --> 00:43:54,191
The carbon is counted as coal.

579
00:43:54,396 --> 00:43:57,126
The calcium in our bones is chalk.

580
00:43:57,332 --> 00:44:01,393
The nitrogen in our proteins
is liquid air.

581
00:44:01,603 --> 00:44:04,766
The iron in our blood
is rusty nails.

582
00:44:04,973 --> 00:44:07,498
Some phosphorus
and some trace elements.

583
00:44:07,943 --> 00:44:09,604
If we didn't know better...

584
00:44:09,812 --> 00:44:13,873
...we might be tempted
to take all these items...

585
00:44:14,083 --> 00:44:17,985
...and mix them together
in a container like this.

586
00:44:40,175 --> 00:44:41,608
And stir.

587
00:44:41,977 --> 00:44:43,774
We could stir all we want...

588
00:44:43,979 --> 00:44:47,540
...and at the end, all we'd have
is some boring mixture of atoms.

589
00:44:47,750 --> 00:44:49,513
How could we expect anything else?

590
00:44:50,018 --> 00:44:53,545
The beauty of a living thing
is not the atoms that go into it...

591
00:44:53,756 --> 00:44:55,724
...but the way those atoms
are put together:

592
00:44:55,924 --> 00:45:00,725
Information distilled over 4 billion
years of biological evolution.

593
00:45:00,929 --> 00:45:03,898
Incidentally, all the organisms
on the Earth are made...

594
00:45:04,099 --> 00:45:06,226
...essentially of that stuff.

595
00:45:06,435 --> 00:45:08,960
An eyedropper full of that liquid...

596
00:45:09,171 --> 00:45:13,574
...could be used to make
a caterpillar or a petunia...

597
00:45:13,776 --> 00:45:17,007
...if only we knew how to put
the components together.

598
00:45:18,347 --> 00:45:23,284
All life on Earth is made from
the same mixture of the same atoms.

599
00:45:23,819 --> 00:45:25,980
On another planet, the jars of life...

600
00:45:26,188 --> 00:45:30,090
...might be filled with very
different atoms and small molecules.

601
00:45:30,292 --> 00:45:34,228
But I think the life forms on many
worlds will consist, by and large...

602
00:45:34,429 --> 00:45:36,624
...of the same atoms
that are popular here...

603
00:45:36,832 --> 00:45:39,027
...maybe even the same big molecules.

604
00:45:39,234 --> 00:45:42,931
So I don't believe we can rescue
the idea of life on Mars...

605
00:45:43,138 --> 00:45:46,699
...by appealing to some
exotic chemistry.

606
00:45:48,343 --> 00:45:51,335
Sometimes we hear about
possible life forms...

607
00:45:51,547 --> 00:45:53,674
...in which silicon replaces carbon...

608
00:45:53,882 --> 00:45:56,646
...or perhaps, liquid ammonia
replaces liquid water.

609
00:45:56,852 --> 00:45:59,252
But at Martian temperatures,
there are no...

610
00:45:59,454 --> 00:46:03,754
...plausible silicon-based molecules
which might carry a genetic code.

611
00:46:03,959 --> 00:46:07,122
And ammonia is liquid
only under higher pressures...

612
00:46:07,329 --> 00:46:09,092
...and lower temperatures.

613
00:46:11,400 --> 00:46:15,461
Someday in the distant future
we might have a collection of jars...

614
00:46:15,671 --> 00:46:19,801
...each containing the elementary
biochemistry of another world.

615
00:46:20,042 --> 00:46:23,375
I don't know if there'll be
one labeled "Mars."

616
00:46:23,579 --> 00:46:24,876
But if there is...

617
00:46:25,080 --> 00:46:29,107
...I bet it will be
full of organic molecules.

618
00:46:32,921 --> 00:46:35,549
There's another way to search
for life on Mars...

619
00:46:35,757 --> 00:46:38,191
...to seek out the discoveries
and delights...

620
00:46:38,393 --> 00:46:41,191
...which that heterogeneous
environment promises us.

621
00:46:41,396 --> 00:46:45,093
One of the things that a grasshopper
can do but Viking can't...

622
00:46:45,300 --> 00:46:46,597
...is move.

623
00:46:46,802 --> 00:46:49,202
We landed in the dull places on Mars.

624
00:46:49,404 --> 00:46:54,341
For all the solid, scientific findings
and hints which Viking provided...

625
00:46:54,543 --> 00:46:59,344
...we know that there are many places
on the planet far more interesting.

626
00:46:59,548 --> 00:47:02,210
What we need is a roving vehicle...

627
00:47:02,417 --> 00:47:05,614
...with advanced experiments in
biology and organic chemistry...

628
00:47:05,821 --> 00:47:08,483
...able to land in the safe
but dull places...

629
00:47:08,690 --> 00:47:10,954
...and wander
to the interesting places.

630
00:47:21,303 --> 00:47:22,827
This roving vehicle...

631
00:47:23,038 --> 00:47:26,940
...was developed by the
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.

632
00:47:27,142 --> 00:47:30,600
It has a long list of dumb things
it knows not to do.

633
00:47:30,812 --> 00:47:35,408
A Mars rover hasn't got time to ask
if it should attempt a steep slope.

634
00:47:35,617 --> 00:47:37,847
Radio waves traveling
at the speed of light...

635
00:47:38,053 --> 00:47:40,283
...take 20 minutes
for the roundtrip to Earth.

636
00:47:40,489 --> 00:47:43,424
By the time it got an answer,
it might be...

637
00:47:43,625 --> 00:47:46,355
...a heap of twisted metal
at the bottom of a canyon.

638
00:47:46,561 --> 00:47:49,496
A rover has to think for itself.

639
00:47:54,937 --> 00:47:58,236
Imagine a rover with laser eyes
like this one...

640
00:47:58,440 --> 00:48:01,876
...but packed with sophisticated
biological and chemical instruments...

641
00:48:02,077 --> 00:48:05,513
...sampler arms, microscopes
and television cameras...

642
00:48:05,714 --> 00:48:08,979
...wandering over
the Martian landscape.

643
00:48:10,519 --> 00:48:13,511
It could drive to its own
horizon every day.

644
00:48:13,722 --> 00:48:16,987
A distant feature it barely
resolves at sunrise...

645
00:48:17,192 --> 00:48:21,595
...it can be sniffing and tasting
by nightfall.

646
00:48:26,768 --> 00:48:30,260
Billions of people could watch
the unfolding adventure...

647
00:48:30,472 --> 00:48:34,966
...on their TV sets as the rover
explores the ancient river bottoms...

648
00:48:35,177 --> 00:48:36,735
...or cautiously approaches...

649
00:48:36,945 --> 00:48:40,312
...the enigmatic pyramids of Elysium.

650
00:48:40,716 --> 00:48:44,015
A new age of discovery
would have begun.

651
00:48:47,155 --> 00:48:49,680
Most of the human species
would witness...

652
00:48:49,891 --> 00:48:53,088
...the exploration of another world.

653
00:48:58,367 --> 00:49:01,268
Only 80 years ago, we could come
no closer to Mars...

654
00:49:01,470 --> 00:49:04,803
...than straining to see
a tiny, shimmering image...

655
00:49:05,007 --> 00:49:07,567
...through a telescope in Arizona.

656
00:49:07,776 --> 00:49:11,678
Now our instruments have actually
touched down on the planet.

657
00:49:12,381 --> 00:49:17,148
Viking is a legacy of H.G. Wells...

658
00:49:17,352 --> 00:49:19,752
...Percival Lowell, Robert Goddard.

659
00:49:19,955 --> 00:49:24,153
Science is a collaborative enterprise
spanning the generations.

660
00:49:24,359 --> 00:49:29,092
When it permits us to see the far side
of some new horizon...

661
00:49:29,297 --> 00:49:31,390
...we remember those
who prepared the way...

662
00:49:31,600 --> 00:49:34,228
...seeing for them also.

663
00:49:36,738 --> 00:49:41,368
On each lander, there is a microdot
on which is written very small...

664
00:49:41,576 --> 00:49:43,806
...the names of 10,000
men and women...

665
00:49:44,012 --> 00:49:46,810
...responsible for Viking's
splendid achievement.

666
00:49:47,015 --> 00:49:50,507
One of the names on this microdot
belonged to a friend of mine:

667
00:49:50,719 --> 00:49:54,587
A remarkable microbiologist
named Wolf Vishniac.

668
00:49:54,790 --> 00:49:57,281
He was the first person
to build a machine...

669
00:49:57,492 --> 00:49:59,926
...to look for microbes
on another world.

670
00:50:00,862 --> 00:50:03,626
His friends called it the "Wolf Trap."

671
00:50:03,832 --> 00:50:06,232
It contained a liquid nutrient...

672
00:50:06,435 --> 00:50:09,404
...to which Martian soil
would be added...

673
00:50:09,604 --> 00:50:11,629
...and any microbes
that liked the food...

674
00:50:11,840 --> 00:50:15,435
...would grow in that nutrient
medium and cloud it.

675
00:50:15,644 --> 00:50:18,442
The Wolf Trap was selected
to go with Viking to Mars...

676
00:50:18,647 --> 00:50:22,879
...but NASA is especially vulnerable
to budget cuts...

677
00:50:23,085 --> 00:50:25,679
...and it was removed
as an economy measure.

678
00:50:25,887 --> 00:50:30,415
It was a terrible blow to Vishniac.
He'd worked 12 years on it.

679
00:50:30,625 --> 00:50:34,186
Others might have
stalked off the project...

680
00:50:34,396 --> 00:50:37,388
...but Vishniac was a gentle
and dedicated man.

681
00:50:37,599 --> 00:50:42,434
He decided instead to study the most
Mars-like environment on this planet:

682
00:50:42,637 --> 00:50:47,336
The dry valleys of Antarctica,
which were long thought to be lifeless.

683
00:50:51,713 --> 00:50:55,240
But Vishniac believed that if he
could find microbes growing...

684
00:50:55,450 --> 00:50:58,749
...in these arid polar wastes...

685
00:50:58,954 --> 00:51:02,515
...the chances of life on Mars
would improve.

686
00:51:05,760 --> 00:51:08,228
So in November 1973...

687
00:51:08,430 --> 00:51:10,660
...Vishniac was left
in a remote valley...

688
00:51:10,866 --> 00:51:14,165
...in the Asgard Mountains
of Antarctica.

689
00:51:14,936 --> 00:51:18,064
He set up hundreds of little
sample collectors...

690
00:51:18,673 --> 00:51:22,769
...simple versions of the Viking
microbiology experiments.

691
00:51:23,545 --> 00:51:24,569
On December 10th...

692
00:51:24,779 --> 00:51:27,475
...he left camp
to retrieve some samples...

693
00:51:27,682 --> 00:51:29,411
...and never returned.

694
00:51:30,018 --> 00:51:32,350
He had wandered
to an unexplored area...

695
00:51:32,554 --> 00:51:34,317
...apparently slipped on the ice...

696
00:51:34,523 --> 00:51:37,321
...and fell more than 100 meters.

697
00:51:38,093 --> 00:51:40,755
Maybe something had caught his eye...

698
00:51:40,962 --> 00:51:43,692
...a likely habitat for microbes...

699
00:51:43,899 --> 00:51:46,766
...or a patch of green
where none should be.

700
00:51:46,968 --> 00:51:49,232
The last entry in his notebook was:

701
00:51:49,437 --> 00:51:54,374
"Station 202 retrieved.
2230 hours.

702
00:51:54,676 --> 00:51:57,611
Soil temperature, minus 10 degrees.

703
00:51:57,812 --> 00:52:01,475
Air temperature, minus 16 degrees."

704
00:52:01,683 --> 00:52:05,449
It had been a typical
summer temperature...

705
00:52:05,687 --> 00:52:07,086
...for Mars.

706
00:52:07,689 --> 00:52:10,283
Some of his soil samples
were later returned...

707
00:52:10,492 --> 00:52:12,323
...and his colleagues discovered...

708
00:52:12,527 --> 00:52:15,621
...that there is life
in the dry valleys of Antarctica...

709
00:52:15,830 --> 00:52:18,924
...that life is even more tenacious
than we had imagined.

710
00:52:19,134 --> 00:52:23,969
That fact may turn out to be important
for the future history of Mars.

711
00:52:29,044 --> 00:52:30,875
There will be a time...

712
00:52:31,079 --> 00:52:33,547
...when Mars is thoroughly explored.

713
00:52:33,748 --> 00:52:36,876
What then?
What should we do with Mars?

714
00:52:37,819 --> 00:52:41,846
If there is life on Mars, then I
believe we should do nothing...

715
00:52:42,057 --> 00:52:43,888
...to disturb that life.

716
00:52:44,826 --> 00:52:49,763
Mars, then, belongs to the Martians,
even if they are microbes.

717
00:52:49,998 --> 00:52:52,558
But suppose that Mars is
in fact lifeless.

718
00:52:52,767 --> 00:52:56,328
Might we in some sense be able
to live there...

719
00:52:56,538 --> 00:52:59,769
...to somehow make Mars
habitable like the Earth...

720
00:52:59,975 --> 00:53:03,069
...to terraform another world?

721
00:53:05,580 --> 00:53:08,481
As lovely a world as Mars is...

722
00:53:08,683 --> 00:53:10,446
...it poses certain problems.

723
00:53:10,652 --> 00:53:13,177
There's too little oxygen,
no liquid water...

724
00:53:13,388 --> 00:53:15,356
...and too much ultraviolet light.

725
00:53:15,557 --> 00:53:19,891
But all that could be solved
if we could make more air.

726
00:53:20,095 --> 00:53:24,191
With higher atmospheric pressures,
liquid water would become possible.

727
00:53:24,399 --> 00:53:27,368
With more oxygen we could
breathe the atmosphere.

728
00:53:27,569 --> 00:53:30,470
And ozone could form
to shield the surface...

729
00:53:30,672 --> 00:53:33,072
...from the solar ultraviolet light.

730
00:53:33,275 --> 00:53:35,835
The evidence for liquid water
suggests...

731
00:53:36,044 --> 00:53:38,638
...that Mars once had
a denser atmosphere...

732
00:53:38,847 --> 00:53:41,077
...which can't have all
escaped to space.

733
00:53:41,283 --> 00:53:43,649
It has to be on the planet somewhere.

734
00:53:44,119 --> 00:53:46,178
In subsurface ice, surely...

735
00:53:46,388 --> 00:53:50,586
...but most accessibly
in the present polar caps.

736
00:53:52,727 --> 00:53:56,288
To vaporize the icecaps,
we must heat them...

737
00:53:56,498 --> 00:54:01,435
...preferably by covering them with
something dark to absorb more sunlight.

738
00:54:01,670 --> 00:54:05,162
That thing ought to also be cheap
and able to make copies of itself.

739
00:54:05,373 --> 00:54:10,037
Well, there are such things.
We call them plants.

740
00:54:10,812 --> 00:54:15,181
We would need to evolve by artificial
selection and genetic engineering...

741
00:54:15,383 --> 00:54:20,047
...dark plants able to survive
the severe Martian environment.

742
00:54:20,755 --> 00:54:22,586
Such plants could be seeded...

743
00:54:22,791 --> 00:54:25,817
...on the vast expanse
of the Martian polar icecaps...

744
00:54:26,127 --> 00:54:29,187
...taking root, spreading,
giving off oxygen...

745
00:54:29,397 --> 00:54:31,888
...darkening the surface,
melting the ice...

746
00:54:32,100 --> 00:54:35,433
...and releasing
the ancient Martian atmosphere...

747
00:54:35,637 --> 00:54:37,901
...from its long captivity.

748
00:54:40,342 --> 00:54:44,244
We might even imagine a kind of
Martian Johnny Appleseed...

749
00:54:44,446 --> 00:54:46,073
...robot or human...

750
00:54:46,281 --> 00:54:50,513
...roaming the frozen polar wastes
in an endeavor which benefits...

751
00:54:50,719 --> 00:54:52,812
...only the generations to come.

752
00:54:53,021 --> 00:54:56,821
It might take hundreds
or thousands of years.

753
00:55:02,163 --> 00:55:04,757
We might, then, want to carry
the liberated water...

754
00:55:04,966 --> 00:55:06,957
...from the melting polar icecaps...

755
00:55:07,168 --> 00:55:09,568
...to the warmer equatorial regions.

756
00:55:09,771 --> 00:55:11,739
And there's a way to do it:

757
00:55:11,940 --> 00:55:14,807
We would build canals.

758
00:55:15,276 --> 00:55:17,972
But that's exactly what
Percival Lowell believed...

759
00:55:18,179 --> 00:55:20,306
...was happening on Mars in his time.

760
00:55:20,515 --> 00:55:23,973
The idea of a canal network
built by Martians...

761
00:55:24,185 --> 00:55:27,586
...may turn out to be
a kind of premonition...

762
00:55:27,789 --> 00:55:30,519
...because, if the planet
ever is terraformed...

763
00:55:30,725 --> 00:55:32,693
...it will be done by human beings...

764
00:55:32,894 --> 00:55:36,591
...whose permanent residence
and planetary affiliation...

765
00:55:36,798 --> 00:55:38,095
...is Mars.

766
00:55:38,299 --> 00:55:41,598
The Martians will be us.

767
00:56:14,035 --> 00:56:18,165
Mars today is strictly relevant to
the global environment of the Earth.

768
00:56:18,373 --> 00:56:22,070
Its antiseptic surface is
a cautionary tale of what happens...

769
00:56:22,277 --> 00:56:24,108
...if you don't have an ozone layer.

770
00:56:24,312 --> 00:56:28,180
Its great dust storms and the resulting
cooling of its surface...

771
00:56:28,383 --> 00:56:30,817
...played a role in the discovery
of nuclear winter...

772
00:56:31,019 --> 00:56:35,115
...the catastrophic climate change on
Earth predicted to follow nuclear war.

773
00:56:35,323 --> 00:56:39,225
So if you didn't have an ounce
of adventuresome spirit in you...

774
00:56:39,427 --> 00:56:43,124
...it would still make sense
to support the exploration of Mars.

775
00:56:43,965 --> 00:56:46,729
In recent years, there's been...

776
00:56:46,935 --> 00:56:48,835
...a groundswell of interest...

777
00:56:49,037 --> 00:56:53,474
...in organizing the first expedition
of humans to go to the planet Mars.

778
00:56:53,675 --> 00:56:57,702
We first need more robotic missions,
including rovers...

779
00:56:57,912 --> 00:57:01,109
...balloons and return-
sample missions...

780
00:57:01,316 --> 00:57:04,217
...and more experience
in long duration space flight.

781
00:57:04,419 --> 00:57:06,284
But eventually, if all goes well...

782
00:57:06,488 --> 00:57:08,820
...the interplanetary
ship or ships...

783
00:57:09,023 --> 00:57:11,184
...would be constructed
in Earth orbit...

784
00:57:11,993 --> 00:57:14,723
...launched on the long
journey to Mars...

785
00:57:15,530 --> 00:57:18,761
...and then a landing module
would set down on the surface.

786
00:57:18,967 --> 00:57:20,366
The crew would emerge...

787
00:57:20,568 --> 00:57:24,561
...making the first human footfalls
on another planet.

788
00:57:25,874 --> 00:57:28,502
It would be very expensive,
of course...

789
00:57:28,710 --> 00:57:31,372
...although cheaper
if many nations share the cost.

790
00:57:31,579 --> 00:57:35,845
The key issue in my mind is whether
the unmet needs here on Earth...

791
00:57:36,050 --> 00:57:37,779
...should take priority.

792
00:57:38,086 --> 00:57:41,522
But that's a question even more
appropriately addressed...

793
00:57:41,723 --> 00:57:43,657
...to the military budgets...

794
00:57:43,858 --> 00:57:47,726
...now $1 trillion a year worldwide.

795
00:57:47,929 --> 00:57:49,920
You can buy a lot for that.

796
00:57:50,465 --> 00:57:54,299
Justifications for the Mars endeavor
have been offered in terms of...

797
00:57:54,502 --> 00:57:56,026
...scientific exploration...

798
00:57:56,237 --> 00:57:59,570
...developing technology,
international cooperation...

799
00:57:59,774 --> 00:58:02,242
...education, the environment.

800
00:58:02,443 --> 00:58:06,880
Some see it as the obvious response
to the future calling.

801
00:58:07,081 --> 00:58:10,414
Some even think we should go
to investigate enigmatic landforms...

802
00:58:10,618 --> 00:58:13,553
...including one that resembles
an enormous human face.

803
00:58:14,155 --> 00:58:17,283
Personally, I think this,
like hundreds of other...

804
00:58:17,492 --> 00:58:19,221
...blocky mesas there...

805
00:58:19,427 --> 00:58:21,725
...is sculpted by
the high-speed winds.

806
00:58:21,930 --> 00:58:24,763
But if we're going anyway,
there's no harm in taking a look.

807
00:58:24,966 --> 00:58:28,367
A remarkably diverse group
of American leaders...

808
00:58:28,570 --> 00:58:30,765
...has endorsed the Mars goal.

809
00:58:31,639 --> 00:58:34,608
I imagine the emissaries from Earth...

810
00:58:34,809 --> 00:58:37,107
...citizens of many nations...

811
00:58:37,312 --> 00:58:40,440
...wandering down an ancient
river valley on Mars...

812
00:58:40,648 --> 00:58:44,084
...trying to understand
how a quite Earth-like world...

813
00:58:44,285 --> 00:58:47,743
...was converted
into a permanent ice age...

814
00:58:47,956 --> 00:58:52,120
...and looking for signs of
ancient life along the river banks.

815
00:58:52,827 --> 00:58:53,816
In the long run...

816
00:58:54,028 --> 00:58:56,895
...the significance of such a mission
is nothing less...

817
00:58:57,098 --> 00:59:01,432
...than the conversion of humanity
into a multiplanet species.

