Astrobiology: Life in the Universe

Astrobiology Science and Technology for Exploring Planets (ASTEP)


  1. Measuring the Weight of Ancient Air


    In the first study of its kind, researchers will measure the air pressure from nearly three billion years ago by using gas bubbles in lava and tiny craters made by raindrops. The results could indicate what sort of life may have existed on the ancient Earth.

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  2. Life Without the Sun


    An ecosystem discovered 2.8 kilometers underground in the Mponeng Gold Mine near Johannesburg, South Africa two years ago has now been shown to comprise only a single species of microbe, existing on energy from radioactivity, completely independently of the Sun. The community of rod-shaped bacteria of the species Desulforudis audaxviator was discovered in 2005-06 by members of the NAI’s Indiana-Princeton-Tennessee Astrobiology Initiative (IPTAI) Team. Their current results are presented in...

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  3. Mirror-Image Clues to Life's Origins


    According to an article published in the Washington Post, scientists studying the Murchison meteorite have found that it contains clues to the origin of chirality. Amino acids in nature have two forms, referred to as right- and left-handed, that are mirror images of each other. The proteins in living organisms, however, are only made from left-handed amino acids. The reason for this chirality is not understood, but this new research suggests it may stem from meteorites that...

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  4. NASA Selects New Science Teams for Astrobiology Institute


    NASA has awarded five-year grants, averaging $7 million each, to 10 research teams from across the country to study the origins, evolution, distribution, and future of life in the universe.

    The interdisciplinary teams will become new members of the NASA Astrobiology Institute, located at NASA’s Ames Research Center at Moffett Field, Calif. Teams from the University of Hawaii in Honolulu; Arizona State University in Tempe; the Carnegie Institution of Washington; Pennsylvania State University in University Park, Pa.; the...

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  5. “Little Bang” triggered Solar System formation


    Astrophysicists from the NAI’s Carnegie Institution of Washington team and their colleagues have shown for the first time that a supernova could have triggered the solar system’s formation under conditions of rapid heating and cooling. For several decades, scientists have thought that the solar system formed as a result of a shock wave from an exploding star—a supernova—that triggered the collapse of a dense, dusty gas cloud that contracted to form the sun...

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  6. NASA Mars Lander Sees Falling Snow, Soil Data Suggest Liquid Past


    NASA’s Phoenix Mars Lander has detected snow falling from Martian clouds. Spacecraft soil experiments also have provided evidence of past interaction between minerals and liquid water, processes that occur on Earth.

    A laser instrument designed to gather knowledge of how the atmosphere and surface interact on Mars has detected snow from clouds about 4 kilometers (2.5 miles) above the spacecraft’s landing site. Data show the snow vaporizing before reaching the ground.

    “Nothing like this view has ever been seen on Mars,”...

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  7. XV International Conference on the Origin of Life – a Personal Perspective


    XV International Conference on the Origin of Life was held in beautiful Florence on August 24-29, 2008. There were two types of oral presentations at the meeting – 45 min or 1 h invited lectures and 15 min contributed talks. There were also very extensive poster sessions. Oral presentations were divided along traditional thematic lines. The first session was devoted to planetary evolution and the habitat for early life. Current views on the formation of planetary system were comprehensively reviewed...

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