
"Is it possible to point the Hubble space telescope at the Apollo landing sites on the Moon, to prove that man did indeed go to the Moon?"
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Looking for Earths in All the Right Places

The Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI) is the data archive center for NASA’s Kepler mission, and has now received the first raw science data from Kepler. Now, the data can be analyzed and used to search for Earth-like worlds around distant stars.Source: [astrobio.net]
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Cooking Up Creation in a Computer
Bruce Damer has created 3-D computer simulations for NASA Ames, and he now hopes to use that experience to simulate the origin of life. The Evogrid is a proposed computerized version of the primordial soup on early Earth. Digitally simulating virtual particles could help answer the question of how life originated on Earth, and perhaps even spread life to other worlds.
Source: [astrobio.net]
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MAVEN
In September, NASA awarded the University of Colorado the biggest research grant in the school’s history for a project led by NAI Emeritus PI Bruce Jakosky to investigate the history of the climate on Mars. The idea behind the $486 million project—known as Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution mission, or MAVEN to try to discover why Mars’ climate has changed over the past few billions years, and whether the planet before those changes was an environment suitable for life…
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Astrobiology, To the Best of Our Knowledge
Today on WAMC’s radio program To The Best Of Our Knowledge, NAI Principal Investigator Doug Whittet talks about astrobiology, and the ongoing research and education activities of his New York Center for Astrobiology (NYCA), seated at RPI. This interview sets up future programs featuring staff scientists and guest lecturers at the NYCA.
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Funding in Evolutionary Processes
The National Science Foundation (NSF) Division of Environmental Biology has released a solicitation for opportunities in the study of Evolutionary Processes. The aim is support research on microevolutionary processes and their macroevolutionary consequences. A wide range of topics are of interest, including mutation, gene flow, natural selection and genetic drift. Understanding how genetically-based changes in organisms affect long-term evolution is of great importance to astrobiology.
For further information and submission guidelines, visit the NSF at: http://www.nsf.gov/funding/pgm_summ.jsp?pims_id=503421&govDel=USNSF_25Source: [NSF]
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Spirit Stuck but Still Sleuthing
NASA’s Mars rover Spirit is having traction trouble in the martian soil. Although stuck, the rover is taking advantage of the situation by learning more about Mars’ environmental history.
Source: [astrobio.net]
June 28, 2009 / Posted by: Aaron Gronstal -
Salt Discovered in Saturn's Outermost Ring
For the first time, scientists working on NASA’s Cassini mission have detected sodium salts in ice grains of Saturn’s outermost ring. Detecting salty ice indicates that Saturn’s moon Enceladus, which primarily replenishes the ring with material from discharging jets, could harbor a reservoir of liquid water — perhaps an ocean — beneath its surface.
Cassini discovered the water-ice jets in 2005 on Enceladus. These jets expel tiny ice grains and vapor, some of which escape the moon’s gravity and form Saturn’s outermost ring. Cassini’s cosmic dust analyzer has examined the composition of those grains and found salt within...
Source: [NASA Press Release]

Astrobiology Field Work
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