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Dive into the research topics where Fabien Stalport is active.

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Featured researches published by Fabien Stalport.


Astrobiology | 2009

Investigating the Photostability of Carboxylic Acids Exposed to Mars Surface Ultraviolet Radiation Conditions

Fabien Stalport; Patrice Coll; Cyril Szopa; H. Cottin; F. Raulin

The detection and identification of organic molecules on Mars are of primary importance to establish the existence of a possible ancient prebiotic chemistry or even biological activity. The harsh environmental conditions at the surface of Mars could explain why the Viking probes-the only efforts, to date, to search for organics on Mars-detected no organic matter. To investigate the nature, abundance, and stability of organic molecules that could survive such environmental conditions, we developed a series of experiments that simulate martian surface environmental conditions. Here, we present results with regard to the impact of solar UV radiation on various carboxylic acids, such as mellitic acid, which are of astrobiological interest to the study of Mars. Our results show that at least one carboxylic acid, mellitic acid, could produce a resistant compound-benzenehexacarboxylic acid-trianhydride (C(12)O(9))-when exposed to martian surface radiation conditions. The formation of such products could contribute to the presence of organic matter in the martian regolith, which should be considered a primary target for in situ molecular analyses during future surface missions.


Astrobiology | 2010

UVolution, a Photochemistry Experiment in Low Earth Orbit: Investigation of the Photostability of Carboxylic Acids Exposed to Mars Surface UV Radiation Conditions

Fabien Stalport; Yuan Yong Guan; Patrice Coll; Cyril Szopa; Frédérique Macari; F. Raulin; Didier Chaput; H. Cottin

The detection and identification of organic molecules on Mars are of prime importance to establish the existence of a possible ancient prebiotic chemistry or even a biological activity. To date, however, no complex organic compounds have been detected on Mars. The harsh environmental conditions at the surface of Mars are commonly advocated to explain this nondetection, but few studies have been implemented to test this hypothesis. To investigate the nature, abundance, and stability of organic molecules that could survive under such environmental conditions, we exposed, in low Earth orbit, organic molecules of martian astrobiological relevance to solar UV radiation (>200 nm). The experiment, called UVolution, was flown on board the Biopan ESA module, which was situated outside a Russian Foton automated capsule and exposed to space conditions for 12 days in September 2007. The targeted organic molecules [alpha-aminoisobutyric acid (AIB), mellitic acid, phthalic acid, and trimesic acid] were exposed with, and without, an analogous martian soil. Here, we present experimental results of the impact of solar UV radiation on the targeted molecules. Our results show that none of the organic molecules studied seemed to be radiotolerant to the solar UV radiation when directly exposed to it. Moreover, the presence of a mineral matrix seemed to increase the photodestruction rate. AIB, mellitic acid, phthalic acid, and trimesic acid should not be considered as primary targets for in situ molecular analyses during future surface missions if samples are only collected from the first centimeters of the top surface layer.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2005

Search for past life on Mars: Physical and chemical characterization of minerals of biotic and abiotic origin: part 1 - Calcite

Fabien Stalport; Patrice Coll; Cyril Szopa; Alain Person; R. Navarro-González; Michel Cabane; Patrick Ausset; M. J. Vaulay

One of the major objectives of the future Martian surface probes will be to reveal a past or present biological activity. We propose that biominerals could have recorded such an activity at Mars, and thus could be interesting targets for these missions. Therefore, we try to find a method capable to discriminate biominerals from their geochemical counterparts. With this aim, various terrestrial aragonites of biotic and abiotic origins were studied as reference minerals, because they could have also been produced at Mars. Their thermal properties were studied with differential thermal analysis, and then compared. The results show that biotic aragonites thermally decompose at temperatures at least 20°C lower than the temperatures of decomposition of abiotic aragonites. Therefore, the temperatures of thermal degradation of such biominerals could be a relevant parameter to find a past biological activity at Mars, and differential thermal analysis could be useful for situ astrobiological exploration of Mars.


Astrobiology | 2015

Effect of Nontronite Smectite Clay on the Chemical Evolution of Several Organic Molecules under Simulated Martian Surface Ultraviolet Radiation Conditions

Olivier Poch; Maguy Jaber; Fabien Stalport; Sophie Nowak; Thomas Georgelin; Jean-François Lambert; Cyril Szopa; Patrice Coll

Most of the phyllosilicates detected at the surface of Mars today are probably remnants of ancient environments that sustained long-term bodies of liquid water at the surface or subsurface and were possibly favorable for the emergence of life. Consequently, phyllosilicates have become the main mineral target in the search for organics on Mars. But are phyllosilicates efficient at preserving organic molecules under current environmental conditions at the surface of Mars? We monitored the qualitative and quantitative evolutions of glycine, urea, and adenine in interaction with the Fe(3+)-smectite clay nontronite, one of the most abundant phyllosilicates present at the surface of Mars, under simulated martian surface ultraviolet light (190-400 nm), mean temperature (218 ± 2 K), and pressure (6 ± 1 mbar) in a laboratory simulation setup. We tested organic-rich samples that were representative of the evaporation of a small, warm pond of liquid water containing a high concentration of organics. For each molecule, we observed how the nontronite influences its quantum efficiency of photodecomposition and the nature of its solid evolution products. The results reveal a pronounced photoprotective effect of nontronite on the evolution of glycine and adenine; their efficiencies of photodecomposition were reduced by a factor of 5 when mixed at a concentration of 2.6 × 10(-2) mol of molecules per gram of nontronite. Moreover, when the amount of nontronite in the sample of glycine was increased by a factor of 2, the gain of photoprotection was multiplied by a factor of 5. This indicates that the photoprotection provided by the nontronite is not a purely mechanical shielding effect but is also due to stabilizing interactions. No new evolution product was firmly identified, but the results obtained with urea suggest a particular reactivity in the presence of nontronite, leading to an increase of its dissociation rate.


Astrobiology | 2012

The PROCESS Experiment: Amino and Carboxylic Acids Under Mars-Like Surface UV Radiation Conditions in Low-Earth Orbit

Audrey Noblet; Fabien Stalport; Yuan Yong Guan; Olivier Poch; Patrice Coll; Cyril Szopa; Mégane Cloix; Frédérique Macari; F. Raulin; Didier Chaput; H. Cottin

The search for organic molecules at the surface of Mars is a top priority of the next Mars exploration space missions: Mars Science Laboratory (NASA) and ExoMars (ESA). The detection of organic matter could provide information about the presence of a prebiotic chemistry or even biological activity on this planet. Therefore, a key step in interpretation of future data collected by these missions is to understand the preservation of organic matter in the martian environment. Several laboratory experiments have been devoted to quantifying and qualifying the evolution of organic molecules under simulated environmental conditions of Mars. However, these laboratory simulations are limited, and one major constraint is the reproduction of the UV spectrum that reaches the surface of Mars. As part of the PROCESS experiment of the European EXPOSE-E mission on board the International Space Station, a study was performed on the photodegradation of organics under filtered extraterrestrial solar electromagnetic radiation that mimics Mars-like surface UV radiation conditions. Glycine, serine, phthalic acid, phthalic acid in the presence of a mineral phase, and mellitic acid were exposed to these conditions for 1.5 years, and their evolution was determined by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy after their retrieval. The results were compared with data from laboratory experiments. A 1.5-year exposure to Mars-like surface UV radiation conditions in space resulted in complete degradation of the organic compounds. Half-lives between 50 and 150u2009h for martian surface conditions were calculated from both laboratory and low-Earth orbit experiments. The results highlight that none of those organics are stable under low-Earth orbit solar UV radiation conditions.


Astrobiology | 2012

The PROCESS experiment: an astrochemistry laboratory for solid and gaseous organic samples in low-earth orbit.

H. Cottin; Yuan Yong Guan; Audrey Noblet; Olivier Poch; Kafila Saiagh; Mégane Cloix; Frédérique Macari; Murielle Jerome; Patrice Coll; F. Raulin; Fabien Stalport; Cyril Szopa; Marylène Bertrand; Annie Chabin; Frances Westall; Didier Chaput; René Demets

The PROCESS (PRebiotic Organic ChEmistry on the Space Station) experiment was part of the EXPOSE-E payload outside the European Columbus module of the International Space Station from February 2008 to August 2009. During this interval, organic samples were exposed to space conditions to simulate their evolution in various astrophysical environments. The samples used represent organic species related to the evolution of organic matter on the small bodies of the Solar System (carbonaceous asteroids and comets), the photolysis of methane in the atmosphere of Titan, and the search for organic matter at the surface of Mars. This paper describes the hardware developed for this experiment as well as the results for the glycine solid-phase samples and the gas-phase samples that were used with regard to the atmosphere of Titan. Lessons learned from this experiment are also presented for future low-Earth orbit astrochemistry investigations.


International Journal of Astrobiology | 2016

MOMA: The Challenge to Search for Organics and Biosignatures on Mars

W. Goetz; William B. Brinckerhoff; Ricardo Arevalo; Caroline Freissinet; Stephanie A. Getty; D. P. Glavin; Sandra Siljeström; Arnaud Buch; Fabien Stalport; A. Grubisic; Xiang Li; V. Pinnick; Ryan M. Danell; F. H. W. Van Amerom; Fred Goesmann; Harald Steininger; Noël Grand; F. Raulin; Cyril Szopa; Uwe J. Meierhenrich; John Robert Brucato

This paper describes strategies to search for, detect, and identify organic material on the surface and subsurface of Mars. The strategies described include those applied by landed missions in the past and those that will be applied in the future. The value and role of ESAs ExoMars rover and of her key science instrument Mars Organic Molecule Analyzer (MOMA) are critically assessed.


International Journal of Astrobiology | 2015

The AMINO experiment: a laboratory for astrochemistry and astrobiology on the EXPOSE-R facility of the International Space Station

H. Cottin; Kafila Saiagh; Yuanyuan Guan; Mégane Cloix; Diana Khalaf; Frédérique Macari; Murielle Jerome; J.-M. Polienor; Yves Benilan; Patrice Coll; Nicolas Fray; Marie-Claire Gazeau; F. Raulin; Fabien Stalport; Nathalie Carrasco; Cyril Szopa; Marylène Bertrand; Annie Chabin; Frances Westall; Jacques Vergne; L.A. Da Silva; Marie-Christine Maurel; Didier Chaput; René Demets

The study of the evolution of organic matter subjected to space conditions, and more specifically to Solar photons in the vacuum ultraviolet range (120–200 nm) has been undertaken in low-Earth orbit since the 1990s, and implemented on various space platforms. This paper describes a photochemistry experiment called AMINO, conducted during 22 months between 2009 and 2011 on the EXPOSE-R ESA facility, outside the International Space Station. Samples with relevance to astrobiology (connected to comets, carbonaceous meteorites and micrometeorites, the atmosphere of Titan and RNA world hypothesis) have been selected and exposed to space environment. They have been analysed after return to the Earth. This paper is not discussing the results of the experiment, but rather gives a general overview of the project, the details of the hardware used, its configuration and recent developments to enable long-duration exposure of gaseous samples in tight closed cells enabling for the first time to derive quantitative results from gaseous phase samples exposed in space.


Astrobiology | 2016

Oxidants at the Surface of Mars: A Review in Light of Recent Exploration Results

Jérôme Lasne; Audrey Noblet; Cyril Szopa; Rafael Navarro-González; Michel Cabane; O. Poch; Fabien Stalport; Pascaline Francois; Sushil K. Atreya; Patrice Coll

In 1976, the Viking landers carried out the most comprehensive search for organics and microbial life in the martian regolith. Their results indicate that Mars surface is lifeless and, surprisingly, depleted in organics at part-per-billion levels. Several biology experiments on the Viking landers gave controversial results that have since been explained by the presence of oxidizing agents on the surface of Mars. These oxidants may degrade abiotic or biological organics, resulting in their nondetection in the regolith. As several exploration missions currently focus on the detection of organics on Mars (or will do so in the near future), knowledge of the oxidative state of the surface is fundamental. It will allow for determination of the capability of organics to survive on a geological timescale, the most favorable places to seek them, and the best methods to process the samples collected at the surface. With this aim, we review the main oxidants assumed to be present on Mars, their possible formation pathways, and those laboratory studies in which their reactivity with organics under Mars-like conditions has been evaluated. Among the oxidants assumed to be present on Mars, only four have been detected so far: perchlorate ions (ClO4-) in salts, hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) in the atmosphere, and clays and metal oxides composing surface minerals. Clays have been suggested as catalysts for the oxidation of organics but are treated as oxidants in the following to keep the structure of this article straightforward. This work provides an insight into the oxidizing potential of the surface of Mars and an estimate of the stability of organic matter in an oxidizing environment. Key Words: Mars surface-Astrobiology-Oxidant-Chemical reactions. Astrobiology 16, 977-996.


Highlights of Astronomy H15, Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union, XXVIIth IAU General Assembly | 2009

Astrochemistry on the EXPOSE/ISS and BIOPAN/Foton experiments

H. Cottin; Yuan Yong Guan; Patrice Coll; David Coscia; Nicolas Fray; Frédérique Macari; Fabien Stalport; F. Raulin; Cyril Szopa; Didier Chaput; Monica Lopez Viso; Marylène Bertrand; Annie Chabin; Frances Westall

We describe three space experiments designed to expose to space conditions, and more specifically to solar UV radiation, selected samples of organic and mineral material.

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Cyril Szopa

Institut Universitaire de France

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F. Raulin

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Didier Chaput

Centre National D'Etudes Spatiales

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Frances Westall

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Frédérique Macari

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Marylène Bertrand

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Annie Chabin

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Yuan Yong Guan

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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René Demets

European Space Research and Technology Centre

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