Notice: This is an archived and unmaintained page. For current information, please browse astrobiology.nasa.gov.

A New Hope for Life in Space

Presenter: Seth Shostak, SETI Institute
When: June 2, 2014 6AM PDT

Alien life. A flurry of recent discoveries has shifted the odds of finding it. Scientists use the Kepler telescope to spot a planet the same size and temperature as Earth … and announce that there could be tens of billions of similar worlds, just in our galaxy!

Plus, new gravity data suggests a mammoth reservoir of water beneath the icy skin of Saturn’s moon Enceladus … and engineers are already in a race to design drills that can access the subsurface ocean of another moon, Jupiter’s Europa.

Meanwhile, Congress holds hearings to assess the value of looking for life in space. Seth Shostak goes to Washington to testify. Hear what he said and whether the exciting discoveries in astrobiology have stimulated equal enthusiasm among those who hold the purse strings.

Guests:

Elisa Quintana – Research scientist at the SETI Institute and NASA Ames Research Center
Christopher McKay – Planetary scientist, NASA Ames Research Center
Victoria Siegel – Autonomous systems engineer for Stone Aerospace Inc.
Cynthia Phillips – Planetary geologist, SETI Institute

Descripción en español

This episode was tagged with: astrobiology biology culture geology technology planetary science astronomy

Big Picture Science

  • The Big Picture Science radio show and podcast engages the public with astrobiology through lively and intelligent storytelling. Science radio doesn’t have to be dull. The only dry thing about our program is the humor. Big Picture Science takes on big questions by interviewing leading researchers and weaving together their stories of discovery in a clever and off-kilter narrative style.
  • Subscribe to this series

Other Seminars in this Series