| You are in: UK | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Wednesday, 24 July, 2002, 08:21 GMT 09:21 UK 'I'm searching for life on Mars' Beagle 2 will head for Mars in mid-2003 Colin Pillinger is the head scientist of Beagle 2, the UK-led project to land on Mars. He tells in our weekly Real Time series how his role has evolved from designing the lander craft to recruiting the band Blur and artist Damien Hirst.
That's why Beagle 2 has to be different - in the beginning we didn't have any money, so we had to create a publicity machine to convince people that we had a project worth funding.
Before we'd get a write-up by a science correspondent in a high-brow newspaper; now we get a science story written by the rock correspondent in the New Musical Express. Is anybody out there? Hooking up with Blur was a bit mutual. Two of the guys have always been keen amateur astronomers. The band was on tour in one of those places you can see a lot of the night sky and they began to wish the UK had a space programme.
I told them about Beagle 2 and my need to raise publicity and money for it. They said: 'A lot of publicity follows us around, how's about you use us?' So we began to do that. They come along to exhibitions, stand on the stand and tell people about Beagle 2. This gets the right kind of people visiting the stand instead of the same people who are already converts. Was I a fan before meeting them? I had a teenage son who had a Blur Parklife poster above his bed at the time, so I'd heard of Blur. I've always liked that kind of music - in fact my kids always used to tell me to turn it down.
When Beagle 2 lands on Mars, I'm going to need a sample to check that the instruments are still performing accurately. An array of spots would be ideal to compare the readings before take-off and after landing. However it's not a simple spot painting - it has to fit within the constraints of the spacecraft - and between us we're designing this thing. Man on the moon My involvement with extraterrestrial activities goes back to the 1960s when I was one of the lucky few Britons to work on the first returned lunar samples brought back by the Apollo 11 mission.
That brought home to me that we could leave Earth, that getting down to the Moon wasn't as hard as a task as getting up off the Earth. Life on Mars Once on Mars, Beagle 2 is going to repeat all the experiments we did on Martian meteorites here on Earth. This could take us all the way to saying that we have discovered life on Mars.
My wife suggested naming Beagle 2 in tribute to Charles Darwin's ship. It was the ship that enabled Darwin to do his work on The Origin of the Species. What we're hoping Beagle 2 will allow us to do is say something categoric about whether evolution has taken place on another planet. |
See also: 30 Jan 02 | Entertainment Top UK stories now: Links to more UK stories are at the foot of the page. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Links to more UK stories |
![]() | ||
| ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- To BBC Sport>> | To BBC Weather>> | To BBC World Service>> ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- © MMIII | News Sources | Privacy |