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Nasa says they are looking for life on Mars past and present and have sent various probes to Mars.However their way of finding life on Mars is very convoluted and relies on assorted chemical reactionswhich can be open to interpretation in unlimited number of ways.Why not just send a solid state microscope to Mars.You can buy a cheap usb solid state microscope on ebay for $10 for direct imaging.For Nasa add 5 zeros so that it costs $1000000 and send it to Mars to send pictures/videos as it scans soil samples for life previous or now.Curiosity has 2 microscopes on it but NASA says they will never use them for life detection and are only interested in dull rock samples and their analysis.
Quote from: profound on 17/07/2017 21:56:14Nasa says they are looking for life on Mars past and present and have sent various probes to Mars.However their way of finding life on Mars is very convoluted and relies on assorted chemical reactionswhich can be open to interpretation in unlimited number of ways.Why not just send a solid state microscope to Mars.You can buy a cheap usb solid state microscope on ebay for $10 for direct imaging.For Nasa add 5 zeros so that it costs $1000000 and send it to Mars to send pictures/videos as it scans soil samples for life previous or now.Curiosity has 2 microscopes on it but NASA says they will never use them for life detection and are only interested in dull rock samples and their analysis.Because the planet is big, and the field of view of a microscope is small.Unless you happened to find life on the mm square you can see with your microscope, it wouldn't tell you anything.But if you analyse the atmosphere it will tell you about life anywhere on the planet.
If life existed / exists on Mars then it's probably microbial. To see bacteria with a light microscope is tricky on Earth. You need a decent prep, a stain and a reasonable sample. It's not practical to search for life with a light microscope. Instead the approach that is being taken is to look for chemical fingerprints potentially associated with life processes, and then narrow the search once we know where to look...
microscopes have come a long way since you were at college...the latest ones can do this automatically since year 2007.
Curiosity has 2 microscopes on it but NASA says they will never use them for life detection and are only interested in dull rock samples and their analysis.
Quote from: profound on 18/07/2017 11:23:01microscopes have come a long way since you were at college...the latest ones can do this automatically since year 2007.Yes, do please tell us where we can get one, because at the moment I'm wasting a fortune in my lab paying expensive humans to prep gram stains on clinical samples. I'll go and buy one and put it to work immediately.
Just google it.
There's probably some way that you can automate the microscopy process, but there is a premium on weight and space when it comes to Mars landers: everything that is on them has to earn their way on. If there was any practical way to do this various space agencies have probably considered it, but I'm guessing it lost to other instruments that were considered to be more important.
Quote from: profound on 22/07/2017 22:25:33Just google it.That's your job, not ours.You made the claim, and it falls to you to prove it.
you dont to do staining nonsense either.so old fashioned.
Quote from: profound on 22/07/2017 22:50:00you dont to do staining nonsense either.so old fashioned.We are all very familiar with brightfield and darkfield techniques, but what makes you think staining is nonsense??
For an automated system you dont need the complexity and expense of staining.The semiconductor industry uses AUTOMATED HIGH RESOLUTION microscopes to check billions of chips to check for defects.
Quote from: Colin2B on 22/07/2017 23:07:33Quote from: profound on 22/07/2017 22:50:00you dont to do staining nonsense either.so old fashioned.We are all very familiar with brightfield and darkfield techniques, but what makes you think staining is nonsense??For an automated system you dont need the complexity and expense of staining.
Quote from: profound on 22/07/2017 23:12:27Quote from: Colin2B on 22/07/2017 23:07:33Quote from: profound on 22/07/2017 22:50:00you dont to do staining nonsense either.so old fashioned.We are all very familiar with brightfield and darkfield techniques, but what makes you think staining is nonsense??For an automated system you dont need the complexity and expense of staining.What ARE you talking about? A gram stain takes a few minutes and is as cheap as chips. In a clinical sample, a gram stain can make the difference between life and death for a meningitis sufferer. I should know, I saved a patient's life thanks to a gram stain when I was a junior doctor.