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The search for signs of life on exoplanets at the interface of chemistry and planetary science
Author(s) -
Sara Seager,
William Bains
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
science advances
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.928
H-Index - 146
ISSN - 2375-2548
DOI - 10.1126/sciadv.1500047
Subject(s) - exoplanet , astrobiology , planetary science , planet , extraterrestrial life , solar system , interface (matter) , planetary system , frontier , astronomy , data science , physics , history , computer science , meteorology , archaeology , capillary number , capillary action
The discovery of thousands of exoplanets in the last two decades that are so different from planets in our own solar system challenges many areas of traditional planetary science. However, ideas for how to detect signs of life in this mélange of planetary possibilities have lagged, and only in the last few years has modeling how signs of life might appear on genuinely alien worlds begun in earnest. Recent results have shown that the exciting frontier for biosignature gas ideas is not in the study of biology itself, which is inevitably rooted in Earth’s geochemical and evolutionary specifics, but in the interface of chemistry and planetary physics.Massachusetts Institute of Technology (Bose Fund

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