Mars: new insights and unresolved questions
Hitesh G. Changela, Elias Chatzitheodoridis, Andre Antunes, David, Beaty, Kristian Bouw, John C. Bridges, Klara Anna Capova, Charles S. Cockell,, Catharine A. Conley, Ekaterina Dadachova, Tiffany D. Dallas Stefaan de Mey,, Chuanfei Dong Alex Ellery, Martin Ferus, Bernard Foing

TL;DR
This paper reviews recent insights into Mars' natural history, habitability, exploration challenges, and unresolved scientific questions, emphasizing implications for future missions and planetary protection.
Contribution
It synthesizes current knowledge on Mars' atmospheric escape, potential biosignatures, contamination issues, and key scientific questions to guide future exploration and policy.
Findings
High escape rates of early Mars' atmosphere and water loss.
Ambiguous nature of putative fossils as biomarkers.
Inevitable microbial contamination from human missions.
Abstract
Mars exploration motivates the search for extraterrestrial life, the development of space technologies, and the design of human missions and habitations. Here we seek new insights and pose unresolved questions relating to the natural history of Mars, habitability, robotic and human exploration, planetary protection, and the impacts on human society. Key observations and findings include:(1)high escape rates of early Mars' atmosphere, including loss of water, impact present-day habitability;(2)putative fossils on Mars will likely be ambiguous biomarkers for life;(3)microbial contamination resulting from human habitation is unavoidable;(4)based on Mars' current planetary protection category, robotic payload(s) should characterize the local martian environment for any life-forms prior to human habitation. Some of the outstanding questions are:(1)which interpretation of the hemispheric…
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