BAIKONUR, KAZAKHSTAN - MARCH 14:  In this handout photo provided by the European Space Agency (ESA),  the ExoMars 2016 lifts off on a Proton-M rocket at Baikonur cosmodrome on March 14, 2016 in Baikonur, Kazakhstan. The Proton rocket is carrying the ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter (TGO) and Schiaparelli descent and landing demonstrator module to Mars. One of the Scientific objectives of the collaborative project between the European Space Agency (ESA) and the Russian Federal Space Agency is to search for signs of past and present life on Mars.  (Photo by Stephane Corvaja/ESA via Getty Images)
ExoMars spacecraft launches in search of life on Mars
01:02 - Source: ESA

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The ExoMars spacecraft launched into space Monday

The European and Russian space agencies are looking for evidence of methane, other atmospheric gases on Mars

CNN  — 

A spacecraft created to detect the atmospheric gases of Mars blasted off into space Monday morning.

The ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter launched from Kazakhstan. Its mission is to seek evidence of methane and other atmospheric gases that could mean there’s active biological life on Mars. The flight will take about seven months to reach the red planet.

During the joint mission by the European and Russian space agencies, the probe will circle Mars and measure tiny amounts of gases, such as methane – a natural gas that is produced in great quantities on Earth. Scientists say the gases may be the waste of microbial beings on Mars.

Other gases that will be measured include water vapour, nitrogen oxides, acetylene.

The methane could signal there’s life on the planet.

“However, other purely geological processes, such as the oxidation of certain minerals, also release methane,” the European Space Agency said on its website.

The second phase of the mission – set to launch in 2018 – will send an ExoMars rover to the planet.