MarsMysteriesOfTheRedPlanet.pdf
MarsMysteriesOfTheRedPlanet.mp3
Neil
Hello. This is 6 Minute English from BBC Learning English. I’m Neil.
Sam
And I’m Sam.
Neil
In this programme, we’ll be discussing our closest neighbour in the solar system
– the planet Mars.
Sam
Often called the ‘Red Planet’, Mars has been in the news a lot recently with three
separate missions being sent to explore the planet’s surface in 2021.
Neil
Our fascination with the Red Planet has given birth to some interesting art over
the years. This includes music, such as David Bowie’s 1973 hit, Life on Mars?, and
countless films, from 1938’s, Mars Attacks!, to the 2015 blockbuster, The
Martian.
Sam
But human interest in Mars goes back much earlier. Ancient civilisations, like the
Maya of central America observed the planet’s colour and recorded its
movements, just like modern astronomers – scientists who study the universe
and the stars, planets and suns within it.
Neil
Yet despite this, many questions remain unanswered. What caused the marks
and scars on the planet’s surface?
Sam
And the biggest question of all: is there life on Mars?
Neil
But before we go on, I have another question which needs answering, Sam. The
ancient Romans were also interested in Mars. They even considered the planet to
be a god – but god of what? Was Mars the Roman god of:
a) Love?
b) Fire? or,
c) War?
Sam
Well, Mars is the ‘Red Planet’, so I guess the answer is b) the Roman God of Fire.
Neil
OK, Sam. We’ll find out the answer at the end of the programme.
Sam
Whatever the Romans thought, civilisations throughout history have described
looking into the night sky and seeing a bright, red light. But where does Mars’
characteristic colour come from?
Neil
Someone who can answer that is Dr Michael Meyer. As lead scientist on NASA’s
Mars Exploration Programme, he spent years observing and recording the Red
Planet.
Sam
Listen to Dr Meyer in conversation with BBC World Service programme, The
Forum. Try to hear the explanation he gives for Mars’s unusual colour.
Michael Meyer
One of the distinctive things about Mars is that it’s red so you can see it and
identify it. It looks red because of rust – iron oxide on the surface, which is red
and, interestingly that look can change. And we saw that in 2018 when there was
a global dust storm – Mars, instead of looking red looked a little orange, and that
changing of colour might have made the civilisations watching Mars maybe
uneasy to see something immutable in our night sky changing colours.
Neil
Dr Meyer calls Mars’s red colour distinctive - easy to recognise because it’s
different from everything else. But did you hear why it’s red in the first place,
Sam?
Sam
Yes - it’s red because of rust - a reddish chemical substance called iron oxide that
occurs when metals react with water and air.
Neil
The colour of this rust can change slightly, from red to brown to orange, and Dr
Meyer thinks these changing colours may have worried ancient astronomers who
believed Mars was immutable, or never changing.
Sam
Unlike ancient civilisations, modern astronomers have sent satellites to land on
Mars and explore its surface. And although no human has set foot on the Red
Planet so far, we know a lot about conditions there.
Neil
So, in the words of David Bowie: is there life on Mars?
Sam
Well, that all depends on finding water. Water is life, and as Dr Meyer told BBC
World Service’s, The Forum, with water anything is possible.
Michael Meyer
And from all that we have learned from astrobiology, life is amazingly adaptable,
but it still needs water. So that’s why water is the key. So, finding liquid water on
Mars, whether or not it’s now or whether or not it’s in the past, tells you that you
potentially have a habitable environment, some place that could support life and
perhaps even Martian life.
Neil
Dr Meyer says that life is amazingly adaptable – able to change in order to
survive in new situations.
Sam
Finding liquid water could make the Red Planet habitable - good enough to live
on. And with billionaire businessmen like Elon Musk planning manned missions
to space, who knows how long it could be before we see a human on Mars?
Neil
And who knows what they’d find there! Tiny worms? Little green men? Or maybe
a Roman god…?
Sam
Ah yes, in your quiz question you asked what Mars was the Roman god of. I
guessed b) the Roman God of Fire.
Neil
Which was the wrong answer, I’m afraid. In fact, the Romans considered Mars
their God of War, and sacrificed wild animals to him such as wolves, bears and,
strangely, woodpeckers!
Sam
OK, Neil let’s recap the vocabulary from this programme on the Red Planet,
Mars, starting with astronomer – someone who studies the stars, planets and
moons in our universe.
Neil
If something is distinctive, it’s easily recognisable because it’s different from
everything else.
Sam
Rust, or iron oxide, is a red coloured chemical that occurs when metals react with
water and air.
Neil
Immutable means never changing.
Sam
Something which is adaptable can easily change to deal with new circumstances.
Neil
And finally, habitable means good enough to live in.
Sam
That’s all we have time for.
Neil
Bye for now!
Sam
Goodbye!
VOCABULARY
astronomer
scientist who studies the universe and the stars, planets, moons and suns
existing within it
distinctive
easy to recognise because it’s different from everything else
rust
reddish chemical substance called iron oxide that occurs when metals react with
water and air
immutable
never changing
adaptable
able to change in order to deal with new situations
habitable
good enough to live in