Jump to content

NASA Astrobiology Institute: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Bluebot (talk | contribs)
bulleting external links using AWB
No edit summary
Line 22: Line 22:
[[Category:Astrobiology]]
[[Category:Astrobiology]]
[[Category:NASA|Astrobiology Institute]]
[[Category:NASA|Astrobiology Institute]]
{{stub}}

Revision as of 13:59, 27 October 2006

The NASA Astrobiology Institute (NAI) engages in government-funded xenobiologic study of the living universe. Advances in science and technology are yielding dramatic new knowledge about the origin, distribution, and destiny of life. Scientists have analyzed complex organic chemistry in interstellar clouds of gas and dust and have discovered more than 200 planets outside of our solar system. Life on Earth has been found thriving at environmental extremes such as in Antarctic rocks, boiling hot springs, and aquifers buried kilometers below the land surface. We have found that liquid water, the one essential ingredient for life as we know it, once flowed on the surface of the planet Mars and exists today below the icy crust of Jupiter's moon, Europa. Life on Earth has been traced back 3.8 billion years to the period of heavy cometary bombardment, an era that simultaneously brought life-giving water and organic compounds to the terrestrial planets while battering them with lethal quantities of impact energy. We are discovering both the fragility and robustness of life as we investigate the history of mass extinctions on our planet, recent extinctions, and subtle alterations in climate triggered by volcanic eruptions and human industry.

NAI astrobiology is, then, a macro-system focused discipline. It seeks to understand the very large scale processes which can influence or even create life. The ramifications of the recent discovery that Mars was once quite wet has caused quite a stir in the astrobiological community. More than this, an astrobiologist wants an answer to the question "How does life arise?" He may model a galaxy's lifetime, or part of it, to see which stars are formed where, how they orbit, and whether they avoid the energetic (and quite deadly) galactic center. Astrobiologists are interested in metallicity of stars since a star with a high metallicity is very likely to have planets. This ties in with the age of stars - An old star was formed before supernovae had enriched the locale with metals. Astrobiology is truly a diverse discipline (being young), yet intensely relevant.

The Astrobiology Institute's focus is multidisciplinary in its content and interdisciplinary in its execution. Its success depends critically upon the close coordination of diverse scientific disciplines and programs, including space missions. The fundamental questions that astrobiology attempts to answer are these:

  • How do habitable worlds form and how do they evolve?
  • How did living systems emerge? How can we recognize other biospheres?
  • How have the Earth and its biosphere influenced each other over time?
  • How do rapid changes in the environment affect emergent ecosystem properties and their evolution?
  • What is the potential for biological evolution beyond the planet of origin?

NAI claims to encourage planetary stewardship through an emphasis on protection against forward and back biological contamination and recognition of ethical issues associated with exploration.

NAI literature says it recognizes a broad societal interest in its endeavors, especially in areas such as achieving a deeper understanding of life, searching for extraterrestrial biospheres, assessing the societal implications of discovering other examples of life, and envisioning the future of life on Earth and in space.

See also

Astrobiology