NASA: National Aeronautics and Space Administration

  1. Content with the tag: “amase

  2. A search for primordial water from deep in the Earth's mantle

    ROADMAP OBJECTIVES: 1.1, 4.1

    A Self-Perpetuating Catalyst for the Production of Organics in Protostellar Nebulae

    ROADMAP OBJECTIVES: 1.1, 3.1

    Acquisition and Installation of a new Cameca ims 1280 ion microprobe

    ROADMAP OBJECTIVES:

    Advancing Techniques for in situ Analysis of Complex Organics

    ROADMAP OBJECTIVES: 2.1, 2.2, 3.1, 3.2, 7.1

    Application of U-tube and fiber-optic distributed temperature sensor to characterize the chemical and physical properties of a deep permafrost and sub-permafrost environment at High Lake, Nunavut, Canada.

    ROADMAP OBJECTIVES: 2.1, 5.2, 5.3, 7.1

    Astrobiology Sample Analysis Program (ASAP)

    ROADMAP OBJECTIVES:

    Biological potential of Mars

    ROADMAP OBJECTIVES: 2.1, 3.1

    Biosignatures in chemosynthetic and photosynthetic systems

    ROADMAP OBJECTIVES: 2.1, 4.1, 5.1, 5.2, 6.1, 7.1, 7.2

    Breakdown of methane due to electric discharge: A Laboratory Investigation with Relevance to Mars

    ROADMAP OBJECTIVES: 2.1

    Chemical Models of Nebular Processes

    ROADMAP OBJECTIVES: 1.1

    Composition of Parent Volatiles in Comets: Oxidized Carbon

    ROADMAP OBJECTIVES:

    Current Status and Future Bioastronomy with the Large Millimeter Telescope

    ROADMAP OBJECTIVES: 3.1

    Early Metabolic Pathways

    ROADMAP OBJECTIVES: 2, 3

    Early Metabolic Pathways

    ROADMAP OBJECTIVES: 3.2, 3.4

    Fingerprinting Late Additions to the Earth and Moon via the Study of Highly Siderophile Elements in Lunar Impact Melt Rocks

    ROADMAP OBJECTIVES: 1.1

    Formation and Detection of Hot-Earth Objects in Systems with Close-in Jupiters

    ROADMAP OBJECTIVES: 1.1, 1.2

    Formation of Planetesimals in a Dynamically Evolving Nebula

    ROADMAP OBJECTIVES: 1.1

    Genes that regulate photosymbiotic relationships

    ROADMAP OBJECTIVES: 2

    Habitable Planets

    ROADMAP OBJECTIVES: 1.1, 1.2, 2.1, 4.3

    Icelandic subglacial lakes

    ROADMAP OBJECTIVES: 2.1, 4.1, 5.3, 6.2

    Interplanetary Pioneers

    ROADMAP OBJECTIVES: 5.3, 6.2

    Microbial Communities and Activities in the Deep Marine Subsurface

    ROADMAP OBJECTIVES: 5.1, 5.3, 6.1, 6.2

    Modeling grain surface reaction pathways for large organic molecules

    ROADMAP OBJECTIVES: 3.1

    Organic and Inorganic Acids from Ion-irradiated Ices

    ROADMAP OBJECTIVES: 2.2, 3.1, 7.1

    Origin and Evolution of Organics

    ROADMAP OBJECTIVES: 1.1, 2.1, 3.1

    Origin and Evolution of Organics in Planetary Systems

    ROADMAP OBJECTIVES: 1.1, 3.1, 3.2

    Origin of Irregular Satellites

    ROADMAP OBJECTIVES: 1.1

    Prebiotic Organics from Space

    ROADMAP OBJECTIVES: 1.1, 2.1, 2.2, 3.1, 3.4, 4.3, 7.1, 7.2

    Protist diversity in extreme environments

    ROADMAP OBJECTIVES: 6, 7

    Recovery of comet 85P/Boethin for the Deep Impact Extended Mission

    ROADMAP OBJECTIVES: 2.2

    Research Activities in the Astrobiology Analytical Laboratory

    ROADMAP OBJECTIVES: 1.1, 2.1, 2.2, 3.1, 7.1

    Sediment-buried basement deep biosphere

    ROADMAP OBJECTIVES: 1.1, 3.3, 4.1, 5.1, 5.2, 5.3, 6.1, 6.2

    Societal and Philosophical Aspects of Astrobiology

    ROADMAP OBJECTIVES: 18

    Studies in Planetary Formation and Evolution

    ROADMAP OBJECTIVES: 11, 12, 8, 9

    Studies of Organic Matter and Water in Meteorites

    ROADMAP OBJECTIVES: 1, 11, 8, 9

    The Main Belt distribution of basaltic asteroids

    ROADMAP OBJECTIVES: 2.2

    THE VYSOS PROJECT

    ROADMAP OBJECTIVES: 1.2

    Ultra-violet processing of ices in the Rosette Nebula

    ROADMAP OBJECTIVES: 3.1

    Understanding the Microbial Ecology of Geologically-based Chemolithoautotrophic Communities

    ROADMAP OBJECTIVES: 2.1, 4.1
  3. NASA participates in the Arctic Mars Analogue Svalbard Expedition (AMASE) 2009


    AMASE on site

    Throughout most of the month of August, an international team of scientists participated in the Arctic Mars Analogue Svalbard Expedition (AMASE) in Norway, conducting scientific research and testing instruments for future NASA and European Space Agency (ESA) Mars robotic missions.

    The Svalbard archipelago is unique in the diversity of geological formations it contains. Few places in the world include a record of so many geological eras exposed in outcrops that can be studied without moving significant amounts of soil and vegetation. Some of these formations are considered interesting analogues for Mars terrains. AMASE 2009 test...

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  4. AMASE 2009 Expedition Finishes



    Researchers report from the field during the closing days of the AMASE 2009 Expedition to Norway’s Svalbard island in the arctic. As the mission completed, the team simulated a week in the life of a Mars rover science team in preparation for a future Mars sample return mission.

    Part 1: AMASE 2009 Expedition Takes Off
    Part 2: Roving the AMASEing Arctic
    Part 3: The AMASEing Adventure Continues
    Part 4: Amase-ing Life on the Ice
    Part 5: Goddess of the Arctic
    Part 6: Arctic Preparations for Mars

    Source: [astrobio.net]

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  5. Arctic Preparations for Mars


    Previous missions to Mars have been searching for signs that Mars once had liquid water, and potentially habitats for life. The next generation of martian rovers will search for signs of past or present life on Mars more directly. Technologies for such missions are now being tested in the remote arctic.

    Part 1: AMASE 2009 Expedition Takes Off
    Part 2: Roving the AMASEing Arctic
    Part 3: The AMASEing Adventure Continues
    Part 4: Amase-ing Life on the Ice
    Part 5: Goddess of the Arctic

    Source: [astrobio.net]

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  6. Goddess of the Arctic



    Members of the 2009 AMASE Expedition describe their work in the ‘scientific playground’ of Bockfjorden on the arctic island of Svalbard. The team collected samples of rock and ice that will be examined for signs of life. In doing so, they are testing technologies that will one day be used on Mars.

    Part 1: AMASE 2009 Expedition Takes Off
    Part 2: Roving the AMASEing Arctic
    Part 3: The AMASEing Adventure Continues
    Part 4: Amase-ing Life on the Ice

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  7. Amase-ing Life on the Ice


    AMASE 2009 Expedition
    Far north in the arctic, the AMASE 2009 expedition team is collecting samples of unique life that inhabits the glacial ice of Svalbard, Norway. The expedition is a test for technology that could one day be used in the search for life on Mars.

    Part 1: AMASE 2009 Expedition Takes Off
    Part 2: Roving the AMASEing Arctic
    The AMASEing Adventure Continues

    Source: [astrobio.net]

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  8. The AMASEing Adventure Continues


    Svalbard Norway
    Coverage of the 2009 AMASE Expedition to Norway’s Svalbard island continues. In this installment, Adrienne Kish discusses the steps that were taken to prepare the FIDO rover for its first appearance on Svalbard, where it is collecting samples and looking for signs of life in preparation for Mars.

    Part 1: AMASE 2009 Expedition Takes Off
    Part 2: Roving the AMASEing Arctic

    Source: [astrobio.net]

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  9. Roving the AMASEing Arctic


    The 2009 AMASE expedition in now underway on the Norwegian island of Svalbard. Members of the expedition team are providing updates on scientific activities as they test technologies for future Mars missions in the harsh, arctic terrain. The primary goal of the AMASE team is to develop methods to search for life on other planets in our solar system, such as Mars.

    Source: [astrobio.net]

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  10. AMASE 2009 expedition takes off in the Arctic



    The Arctic Mars Analog Svalbard Expedition (AMASE) 2009 is now underway in Svalbard, Norway. AMASE has established Svalbard as a test bed for life-detection technology that will be used on future NASA and ESA ‘Search for Life’ mission to Mars. This year’s expedition includes more than 30 scientists and engineers from a wide range of disciplines, including microbiology, geology and biochemistry. The team will be testing equipment that will eventually fly on future Mars missions while studying extremophiles that live in glacial ice.

    Source: [astrobio.net]

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  11. A New Way to Keep Clean


    It is almost impossible to get a spacecraft completely clean before launch. Therefore, missions to other planets carry some risk of forward contamination – where microorganisms from Earth travel along with the spacecraft to its destination. This is a big problem in the search for life on planets like Mars, because you don’t want to contaminate the site you’re going to be studying. To help combat this problem, a team of scientists funded by a NASA ASTEP award have developed a new cleaning protocol that could be used for future missions to Mars and beyond.

    Source: [Astrobiology Magazine]

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  12. Mars Science Laboratory Shakedown in the High Arctic


    Members of the AMASE team (AMASE stands for Arctic Mars Analog Svalbard Expedition) last month completed their fourth field season on the Arctic island of Spitsbergen. They went to test out instruments similar to those that will fly on an upcoming mission to Mars, and to perform a field test of a prototype rover, Cliff-bot, that is capable of climbing up and down 80-degree slopes.

    Spitsbergen is the largest island in the Norwegian Svalbard archipelago, which lies between the northern tip of Norway and the northern polar ice cap. It is an inviting destination for astrobiology researchers because...

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