Are we alone in the universe? So far, the only life we know of is right here on Earth. But here at NASA, we’re looking.
NASA is exploring the solar system and beyond to help us answer fundamental
questions about life beyond our home planet. From studying the
habitability of Mars, probing promising “oceans worlds,” such as Titan and
Europa, to identifying Earth-size planets around distant stars, our science
missions are working together with a goal to find unmistakable signs of life
beyond Earth (a field of science called astrobiology).
Through the study of astrobiology, NASA invests in understanding the
origins, evolution, and limits of life on Earth. This work has been important
in shaping ideas about where to focus search for life efforts. As NASA explores
the solar system, our understanding of life on Earth and the potential for life
on other worlds has changed alongside the many discoveries. The study of
organisms in extreme environments on Earth, from the polar plateau of
Antarctica to the depths of the ocean, have highlighted that
life as we know it is highly adaptable, but not always easy to find. The search
for life requires great care, and is based in the knowledge we gain by studying
life on Earth through the lens of astrobiology. If there's something out there,
we may not yet know how to recognize it.
Dive into the past, present, and future of NASA’s search for life in the
universe.
Past Missions
Viking 1 and 2
Over 45 years ago, the Viking Project found a place in
history when it became the first U.S. mission to land a spacecraft safely on
the surface of Mars.
Viking 1 and 2, each consisting of an orbiter and a lander,
were NASA’s first attempt to search for life on another planet
and thus the first mission dedicated to astrobiology. The mission’s biology
experiments revealed unexpected chemical activity in the Martian soil,
but provided no clear evidence for the presence of living microorganisms near
the landing sites.
Galileo
NASA’s Galileo mission orbited
Jupiter for almost eight years, and made close passes by all its major
moons. Galileo returned data that continues to shape astrobiology science ––
particularly the discovery that Jupiter’s icy moon Europa has evidence of a
subsurface ocean with more water than the total amount of liquid
water found on Earth. These findings also expanded the search for
habitable environments outside of the traditional “habitable zone” of a system,
the distance from a star at which liquid water can persist on the surface of a
planet.
Cassini
For more than a decade, the Cassini spacecraft shared
the wonders of Saturn and its family of icy moons –– taking us to astonishing
worlds and expanding our understanding of the kinds of worlds where life might
exist.
For the first time, astrobiologists were able to see through the thick
atmosphere of Titan and study the moon’s surface, where they found lakes and
seas filled with liquid hydrocarbons. Astrobiologists are studying what these
liquid hydrocarbons could mean for life’s potential on Titan. Cassini also
witnessed icy plumes erupting from Saturn’s small moon Enceladus. When flying
through the plumes, the spacecraft found evidence of saltwater and organic
chemicals. This raised questions about whether habitable environments could
exist beneath the surface of Enceladus.
Spirit and Opportunity
Mars Exploration Rovers
NASA’s twin Mars Exploration
Rovers, Spirit and Opportunity, launched towards Mars in
2003 in search of answers about the history of water on Mars. Originally a
three-month prime mission, both robotic explorers far outlasted their original
missions and spent years collecting data at the surface of Mars.
Spirit and Opportunity were the first mission to prove liquid water, a
key ingredient for life, had once flowed across the surface of Mars. Their
findings shaped our understanding of Mars’ geology and past
environments, and importantly suggested Mars’ ancient
environments may once have been suitable for life.
Kepler and K2
NASA’s first planet-hunting mission, the Kepler Space Telescope, paved the way for our
search for life in the solar system and beyond. An important part of Kepler’s
work was the identification of Earth-size planets around distant stars.
After nine years in deep space, collecting data that indicate our sky
to be filled with billions of hidden planets – more planets even than stars –
the space telescope retired in 2018. Kepler left a legacy of more than 2,600
exoplanet discoveries, many of which could be promising places for life.
Spitzer
Over its sixteen years in space, the Spitzer
Space Telescope evolved into a premier tool for
studying exoplanets, using its infrared view of the universe. Spitzer marked a
new age in planetary science as one of the first telescopes to directly detect
light from the atmospheres of planets outside the solar system, or exoplanets.
This enabled scientists to study the composition of those atmospheres and even
learn about the weather on these distant worlds.
Spitzer’s infrared instruments allowed scientists to peer into cosmic
regions that are hidden from optical telescopes, including dusty stellar
nurseries, the centers of galaxies, and newly forming planetary systems.
Spitzer’s infrared eyes also enabled astronomers to see cooler objects in
space, like failed stars (brown dwarfs), extrasolar planets, giant molecular
clouds, and organic molecules that may hold the secret to life on other
planets.
Current Missions
Hubble
Since it launched in 1990, the Hubble Space Telescope has made immense
contributions to astrobiology. Astronomers used Hubble to make the first
measurements of the atmospheric composition of extrasolar planets, and Hubble
is now vigorously characterizing exoplanet atmospheres with constituents such
as sodium, hydrogen, and water vapor. Hubble observations are also providing
clues about how planets form, through studies of dust and debris disks around
young stars.
Not all of Hubble’s contributions involve distant targets. Hubble has also
been used to study bodies within the solar system, including asteroids, comets,
planets, and moons, such as the intriguing ocean-bearing icy moons Europa and
Ganymede. Hubble has provided invaluable insight into life’s potential in
the solar system and beyond.
MAVEN
NASA’s atmosphere-sniffing Mars Atmosphere and
Volatile Evolution (MAVEN) mission launched in November 2013
and began orbiting Mars roughly a year later. Since that time, the
mission has made fundamental contributions to understanding the history of the
Martian atmosphere and climate.
Astrobiologists are working with this atmospheric data to better understand
how and when Mars lost its water and identifying periods in Mars’ history when
habitable environments were most likely to exist at the planet’s
surface.
Mars Odyssey
For two decades, NASA’s Mars Odyssey – the longest-lived
spacecraft at the Red Planet – has helped locate ice, assess landing sites, and
study the planet’s mysterious moons.
Odyssey has provided global maps of chemical elements and minerals that
make up the surface of Mars. These detailed maps are used by astrobiologists to
determine the evolution of the Martian environment and its potential for
life.
Mars Reconnaissance
Orbiter
NASA's Mars Reconnaissance
Orbiter (MRO) is on a search for evidence that water
persisted on the surface of Mars for a long period of time. While other Mars
missions have shown that water flowed across the surface in Mars' history, it
remains a mystery whether water was ever around long enough to provide a
habitat for life.
Data from MRO is essential to astrobiologists studying the potential for
habitable environments on past and present Mars. Additionally, these studies
are important in building climate models for Mars, and for use in
comparative planetology studies for the potential habitability of exoplanets
that orbit distant stars.
Curiosity Mars Rover
The Curiosity Mars rover is studying whether
Mars ever had environments capable of supporting microbial life. In other
words, its mission is to determine whether the planet had all of the
ingredients life needs – such as water, carbon, and a source of energy –
by studying its climate and geology.
It’s been nearly nine years since Curiosity touched down on Mars in 2012,
and the robot geologist keeps making new discoveries. Curiosity provided
evidence that freshwater lakes filled Gale Grater billions of years
ago. Lakes and groundwater persisted for millions of years and contained all
the key elements necessary for life, demonstrating
Mars was once habitable.
TESS Mission
The Transiting
Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) is the next step in the search for
planets outside of our solar system, including those that could support life.
Launched in 2018, TESS is on a mission to survey the entire sky and is expected
to discover and catalogue thousands of exoplanets around nearby bright
stars.
To date, TESS has discovered more than 120 confirmed exoplanets and more
than 2,600 planet candidates. The planet-hunter will continue to find
exoplanets targets that NASA’s upcoming James Webb Space
Telescope will study in further detail.
Perseverance Mars
Rover
NASA’s newest robot astrobiologist, the Perseverance Mars rover, touched down safely on
Mars on February 18, 2021, and is kicking off a new era of exploration on
the Red Planet. Perseverance will search for signs of ancient
microbial life, which will advance the agency’s quest to explore the past habitability
of Mars.
What really sets this mission apart is that the rover has a drill to
collect core samples of Martian rock and soil, and will store them in sealed
tubes for pickup by a future Mars
Sample Return mission that would ferry them back to
Earth for detailed analysis.
Upcoming Missions
James Webb Space
Telescope
The James Webb Space
Telescope (Webb), slated to launch in 2021, will be the premier
space-based observatory of the next decade. Webb is a large infrared telescope
with a 6.5-meter primary mirror.
Webb observations will be used to study every phase in the history of the
universe, including planets and moons in our solar system, and the
formation of distant solar systems potentially capable of supporting
life on Earth-like exoplanets. The Webb telescope will also be
capable of making detailed observations of the atmospheres of planets
orbiting other stars, to search for the building blocks of life on
Earth-like planets beyond our solar system.
Europa Clipper
Mission
Jupiter’s moon Europa may have the potential to harbor life. The Europa Clipper mission will conduct
detailed reconnaissance of Europa and investigate whether the icy moon could
harbor conditions suitable for life. Targeting a 2024 launch, the mission will
place a spacecraft in orbit around Jupiter in order to perform a detailed
investigation of Europa –– a world that shows strong evidence for an ocean of
liquid water beneath its icy crust.
Europa Clipper is not a life-detection mission, though it will
investigate whether the icy moon, with its subsurface ocean, has the capability
to support life. Understanding Europa’s habitability will help scientists
better understand how life developed on Earth and the potential for finding
life beyond our planet.
Dragonfly Mission to
Titan
The Dragonfly mission will deliver a
rotorcraft to visit Saturn’s largest and richly organic moon, Titan. Slated for
launch in 2027 and arrival in 2034, Dragonfly will sample and examine
dozens of promising sites around Saturn’s icy moon and advance our search for
the building blocks of life.
This revolutionary mission will explore diverse locations to look for
prebiotic chemical processes common on both Titan and Earth. Titan is an analog
to the very early Earth, and can provide clues to how prebiotic chemistry under
these conditions may have progressed.
Nancy
Grace Roman Telescope
Slated to launch in the mid-2020s, the Roman
Space Telescope will have a field of view that is
200 times greater than the Hubble infrared instrument, capturing more of the
sky with less observing time. In addition to ground-breaking astrophysics and
cosmology, the primary instrument on Roman, the Wide Field Instrument, has a
rich menu of exoplanet science. It will perform a microlensing survey of the
inner Milky Way that will reveal thousands of worlds orbiting within
the habitable zone of their star and farther out, while providing an additional
bounty of more than 100,000
transiting exoplanets.
The mission will also be fitted with “starglasses,”
a coronagraph instrument that can block out the glare
from a star and allow astronomers to directly
image giant planets in orbit around it. The coronagraph will
provide the first in-space demonstration of technologies needed for future
missions to image and characterize smaller, rocky planets in the
habitable zones of nearby stars. Roman coronagraph will make
observations that could contribute to the discovery of new worlds beyond our
solar system and advance the study of extrasolar planets that could
be suitable for life.
Learn more about the NASA Astrobiology Program: https://astrobiology.nasa.gov/
Source: https://www.nasa.gov/feature/nasa-s-search-for-life-astrobiology-in-the-solar-system-and-beyond
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