Film premiere: the obstacles keeping a Mars project earthbound

Press release

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Beda Hofmann auf der Suche nach Leben auf dem Mars
Beda Hofmann, head of the Earth Sciences Department at the NMBE, in search of life on Mars. NMBE/Matthias Günter

This week ought to have marked the opening of a Bern Natural History Museum exhibition on ExoMars – an international space travel project involving experts from the museum. ExoMars would have been ready to launch on 20 September 2022. Its aim? To find potential traces of micro-organisms on Mars. But the Russian invasion of Ukraine led to its start being postponed. A new documentary from the NMBE describes the hurdles and hopes for the crisis-hit project.

The question of whether there has ever been life on Mars tends to spark people’s imagination. It is now clear that the little green men of popular culture have no basis in reality. But that doesn’t mean life on Mars is not, or has never been, possible. A glimpse at the galaxy of micro-organisms found on Earth offers potential answers. Extremely high and low temperatures, a high salt content or low energy supply: these lifeforms, for example specific types of bacteria, are capable of withstanding even the harshest conditions.  Some leave behind traces of their existence lasting millennia. ExoMars was launched in an attempt to locate this kind of evidence of life on Mars.

Partnership with Russia is no more

ExoMars is a space probe project conducted by the European Space Agency (ESA) in partnership with the Russian space agency Roskosmos. The start of the mission was originally planned for 2008. After numerous delays, it was postponed to 2018, then to 20 September 2022. The mission’s crowning glory is the Rosalind Franklin rover, a hi-tech vehicle that can search beneath the planet’s surface for signs of life. Or could search, one might say: once Russia invaded Ukraine, the partnership with Roskosmos was terminated and ExoMars postponed once again – with a new date still to be confirmed. 

A Mars project with the NMBE on board

The Natural History Museum of Bern (NMBE) also contributed to the mission. Swiss scientists developed a new instrument for the rover: CLUPI (Close-UP Imager) is a miniaturised camera system capable of creating high-resolution colour close-ups of soils, rocks and core samples to help look for potential biological structures and patterns. The principal investigator – known as the ‘father’ of CLUPI – is Jean-Luc Josset from the Space Exploration Institute, Neuenburg.  He developed CLUPI together with a team of Swiss and French researchers, including Beda Hofmann, Head of Earth Sciences at the NMBE. The project was supported by the Swiss Space Office at the State Secretariat for Education, Research and Innovation (SERI) and the French space agency (CNES). Beda Hofmann would have analysed and evaluated images transmitted by CLUPI if the mission had gone ahead.

A documentary in place of an exhibition

From 20 September 2022, the planned ExoMars start date, a special exhibition at the NMBE was set to inform the public of the mission’s status. In its place, the museum has now produced a short documentary film on the project’s background – and the perpetual search for extra-terrestrial life. Over approximately 10 minutes, it explains the CLUPI technology and shows what traces of extra-terrestrial micro-organisms could look like using fossils from the museum’s collections.

The film ‘Life on Mars’ is showing from 20 September 2022 as part of the ‘Five stars’ (‘5 Sterne’) exhibition and on our online channels.