When Bernard Foing, chief lunar scientist for the European Space Agency, suggested last week that a DNA library be placed on the moon in the event of some unspecified catastrophe on Earth, he was surely thinking about similar projects already at work on a more terrestrial level. As Space.com reported recently, a project called Frozen Ark already exists to preserve the DNA of endangered species. Here's a link to a BBC story on Frozen Ark. The Space.com story quotes Bill Holt from the Zoological Society of London, who sits on the Frozen Ark steering committee, as saying that it would be "...prudent to store all of the DNA sequence data presently being collected by the Human Genome Project" safely on the Moon, "so that we never have to repeat it all, come what may." Both ideas are a telling reminder of a simple fact: the Earth has been the repeated target of asteroids, large meteors and comets throughout its existence, and a massive hit from such an object could do anything from...
Images of Two Possible Planets Remain Unconfirmed
An interesting piece in Nature's online edition describes the race to see who has actually imaged a planet around another star. As discussed in Centauri Dreams earlier, a team in Chile at the European Southern Observatory has used infrared to reveal what may be a planet circling the star 2M1207, a brown dwarf, but there is still no conclusive evidence that the planetary candidate actually orbits the star. But another team, from Pennsylvania State University and using Hubble images, also believes it has found such an object, though they won't yet name the star or discuss its location for fear of being scooped. If the PSU object is indeed a planet, it is between five and ten times the mass of Jupiter and roughly 100 light years from Earth, in an orbit similar to that of Neptune around our Sun. Infrared is useful in both sets of observations because the contrast between a star and its planet is a thousand times less at these wavelengths; in visual light, the glow of a planet is...
News Improving for Genesis Mission
Even as NASA announced the head of the Genesis Mishap Investigation Board (Dr. Michael Ryschkewitsch, Director of the Applied Engineering and Technology Directorate at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center), unexpectedly good news from the mission continued to mount. At least two of the four segments of the solar wind concentrator Genesis carried seem to be intact, and the gold foils used to analyze nitrogen isotopes have also survived. Even the hexagonal wafers that collected solar wind particles may yield good data, despite the fact that all or nearly all are broken. ""We won't really know how many can be recovered for some time, but we are far more hopeful important science can be conducted than we were on Wednesday," said Dr. Roger Wiens of the Los Alamos National Laboratory, a member of the Genesis science team. "We are very encouraged." This is astoundingly good news to anyone who watched Genesis hit the ground at the Utah Test & Training Range at close to 200 mph on September 8....
Life Detection for Advanced Missions
Because its geology is so much like that of Mars, the Norwegian island of Svalbard is a useful site for creating strategies for future mission sampling and analysis. The Arctic Mars Analogue Svalbard Expedition (AMASE) has been using a suite of instruments to detect bacterial populations including spectroscopic equipment and a device that can detect cell wall components. The most interesting of the team's methods may be protein microarrays, which can test for thousands of different molecules simultaneously. "We've passed a major milestone," said Dr. Andrew Steele of the Carnegie Institution's Geophysical Laboratory, and a member of the AMASE team. "We successfully tested an integrated Mars life-detection strategy for the first time and showed that if life on Mars resembles life on Earth at all, we'll be able to find even a single-cell." Source: Press release "Major milestone for detecting life on Mars" via EurekAlert. An image of Dr. Steele on Svalbard (with spectacular scenery in...
Possible Image of an Extrasolar World
Getting an image of a planet around another star has been an elusive goal for astronomers, and most candidates have proven to be background stars, or sometimes faint stellar members of what turned out to be binary systems. Now a new candidate has emerged. An international team of astronmers, using observations from the the ESO Paranal Observatory in northern Chile, has picked up what may be a gas giant planet orbiting the brown dwarf 2M1207 at approximately twice the distance between the Sun and Neptune. The object is located in the far southern sky in the direction of the constellation Hydra, and is approximately 230 light years away. The photograph at left is based on three near-infrared exposures (in the H, K and L' wavebands) with the NACO adaptive-optics facility at the 8.2-m VLT Yepun telescope at the ESO Paranal Observatory. More observations are needed, but what's interesting about this 'Giant Planet Candidate Companion,' as it is being called, is that its spectrum shows...
Something Exquisite for the Weekend
NGC 6543 is called the Cat's Eye Nebula; it was one of the first planetary nebulae to be discovered. This gorgeous view from Hubble shows that it is also one of the most complex nebulae ever studied. You're looking at a Sun-like star at the very end of its life, losing its outer gaseous layers to create concentric clouds in ways that are still mysterious. Each bright ring is actually the edge of a spherical bubble of gas. Hubble used its Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS) to make this image.
A Self-Sustaining Robot
An interstellar robotic probe will need robotic systems that are completely autonomous. Think about it: the Jet Propulsion Laboratory was able to solve the rover Spirit's problems on Mars by sending it a series of commands and a software patch. Spirit's computer was crashing whenever it tried to access its data storage, forcing a series of reboots that were running down the rover's batteries. By deleting a backlog of files that were clogging the system's flash memory, JPL got the rover back on track. But Mars is virtually next-door compared to Alpha Centauri. Even the Galileo probe, which experienced a tape recorder malfunction and a reprogramming forced by the failure of its high-gain antenna, could be fixed from Earth because the radio delay was only eighty minutes round-trip. Imagine what will happen with an 8.6 year round-trip delay and you can see why robotic repair systems will have to function on their own. Of course, not all progress on robot autonomy is related to space...
A Martian Baltic Sea
A University of Colorado study, using data from the Mars Global Surveyor and Mars Odyssey orbiters, has concluded that the area surrounding the rover Opportunity's landing site once contained a huge body of water -- up to 330,000 square kilometers. That makes this Martian sea comparable to the Baltic or, as investigator Brian Hynek of the Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics puts it, 'all of the Great Lakes combined.' Hynek's paper on the Martian sea ("Implications for hydrologic processes on Mars from extensive bedrock outcrops throughout Terra Meridiani") appears in the September 9 issue of Nature, and you can find CU's press release on his work here. The physicist used the thermal emission imaging system on-board Mars Odyssey to infer the size of rocks, studying how larger and smaller particles change temperature at different rates in daylight and at night. His thermal maps show wide areas of bedrock, and tell him that water once extended far beyond the landing area. To...
Whoops!
Well, David Brin wrote a novel called Sundiver, which wouldn't have been a bad name for the end of this mission. Genesis may still have some salvageable science on-board, but it's hard to see how much of the solar wind experiment could have survived its crash. Here's a link to the BBC's coverage. No deployment on the drogue chute!
Sunfall
Use NASA's Genesis mission page to monitor the progress of the first sample return mission since Apollo 17. Coverage will be broadcast live and on the Internet (links available at the NASA site). Although snagging the Genesis return capsule in mid-air (using helicopters piloted by stunt flyers) should be spectacular, what interests interstellar theorists is what we may learn about the solar wind. This stream of charged particles and magnetic fields moving up to 500 kilometers per second may eventually be used to push a magnetic sail like M2P2 (Mini-Magnetospheric Plasma Propulsion), which the University of Washington's Robert Winglee designed in a study for NASA's Institute for Advanced Concepts. A NASA page on the Winglee design can be found here. From the article: There is enough power in the solar wind to accelerate a 136 kg (300 lb) spacecraft to speeds of up to 288,000 km/h (180,000 mph) or 6.9 million km (4.3 million mi) a day. By contrast, the space shuttle travels at about...
Planetary Systems in the Billions
Planet-hunter Geoff Marcy is quoted in this story in The Oklahoman on the prevalence of planetary systems around other stars. His estimate: 20 billion systems in the Milky Way alone, and that's the lower end of the range. In fact, fully half of the galaxy's 200 billion stars may be capable of supporting planets. From the article: Marcy said astronomers may spot a rocky Earth-like planet as soon as five years from now, but will have to hypothesize about its life-sustaining possibilities until a robotic probe can be sent to the extrasolar planetary system. Exactly so, at least for close-up studies, but missions like Terrestrial Planet Finder may be able to analyze planetary atmospheres closely enough to find the methane and ozone signature of life. We'll need those missions (along with the earlier Kepler and Space Interferometry Mission projects) to help us choose our first targets for interstellar probes. Given the magnitude of the enterprise, we'll want our destination star to be...
Slow Boat to Centauri?
Sending a golden disc filled with the sights and sounds of Earth, as we did with the Voyager spacecraft, may have been a pretty efficient way to communicate with extraterrestrial civilizations. That's the view of Christopher Rose, a professor of electrical and computer engineering at Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey. Rose and physicist Gregory Wright have the cover of the September 2 issue of Nature with a paper called ""Inscribed matter as an energy-efficient means of communication with an extraterrestrial civilization." Their thesis grew out of Rose's studies of wireless commnications and what he calls the 'energy budget' of sending a signal. Would ET really use radio, or would an advanced civilization scatter artifacts in more physical form? You can read the Rutgers press release about Rose and Wright's work here. And here is a quote: Rose is in favor of listening for that close encounter, but he thinks researchers should have their eyes open, too. Rose speculates that...
Continuing Work on Solar Sail Deployment
Here is a press release first seen on Science Blog that details NASA's latest work on solar sails, and that of two key subcontractors. L'Garde's solar sail deployment occurred in July, using a 100-foot in diameter vacuum chamber at NASA's Glenn Research Center in Ohio. The test included temperatures of minus 112 Fahrenheit to mimic actual space conditions, and used inflatable booms that become rigid once deployed. Able Engineering has also tested a solar sail deployment at NASA's Langley Research Center in Hampton, VA using a graphite boom that is extended by remote control. Able's boom supports a sail made of an aluminized material called CP-1, produced by SRS Technologies of Huntsville. Deploying a solar sail is an enormous challenge, particularly when you start talking about sails considerably larger than these test models (we'll need sails kilometers in diameter when and if we start talking about interstellar missions). Moktar Salama of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, who has been...
More on SETI@Home Signal
The BBC talked to SETI@Home researchers and others this morning re the possible SETI reception discussed below. The verdict: "It's all hype and noise," said its chief scientist, Dr Dan Wertheimer. "We have nothing that is unusual. It's all out of proportion." And Dr Paul Horowitz, of Harvard University, who specialises in hunting for possible alien contacts added: "It's not much of anything at all. We're not investigating it further." What will bear investigating is what caused what seems to have been a spurious signal. Should be a good chance to sort out a possible bug in the Arecibo receiving equipment. Check here for more.
SETI@Home’s Odd Catch
New Scientist is carrying the news of a singular find by SETI@Home, the distributed computing project that uses data from the Arecibo radio telescope to look for extraterrestrial radio signals. What is being described as 'the best candidate yet for a contact by intelligent aliens in the nearly six-year history of the SETI@home project' has been detected, emmanating from a source that may or may not be located somewhere between the constellations Pisces and Aries. Dubbed SHGb02+14a, the signal is weak and may in fact be the result of either an unknown natural phenomenon or an artifact in or near the Arecibo dish itself. Centauri Dreams' take: the odd drift in the 1420 MHz signal argues for a local anomaly at Arecibo. Yes, it could be a transmitter on a rapidly spinning planet, but what confounds researchers is that each observation starts at exactly 1420 MHz and then sees the signal begin to drift. What we need are independent observations from other dishes to confirm whether...
More on Small Extrasolar Planets
The National Science Foundation's press release on the twin planetary discoveries recently announced by NASA can be found here. In it, Geoff Marcy suggests that while lower-mass planets are much harder to detect than the kind of gas giants that have so far dominated extra-solar planetary discovery, they may be much more common. And the implication from that is that Earth-size worlds may be 'downright abundant.' Re the Gliese 436 planet, the primary instruments were the two Keck telescopes at Mauna Kea, which monitored 950 nearby stars, 150 of which were tiny M-class red dwarfs: The effort paid off in July 2003, when the astronomers noticed a periodic wobble in Gliese 436, an M dwarf star that lies about 33 light-years from Earth in the direction of the constellation of Leo. Another 12 months of data-taking confirmed the result: Gliese 436 has a Neptune-sized planet of at least 21 Earth masses that goes whipping around in its circular orbit once every 2.64 days. That corresponds to an...
Brighter Than 200 Million Suns
It looks bright enough to be a foreground star, but this supernova, called SN 2004dj, is 11 million light years away in a galaxy known as NGC 2403. Not particularly germane to interstellar propulsion or finding candidates for robotic probes, but simply too remarkable a sight to ignore. You can read more about this Hubble photograph here. From the press release issued by the Space Telescope Science Institute: The heart of NGC 2403 is the glowing region at lower left. Sprinkled across the region are pink areas of star birth. The myriad of faint stars visible in the Hubble image belong to NGC 2403, but the handful of very bright stars in the image belong to our own Milky Way Galaxy and are only a few hundred to a few thousand light-years away. This image was taken on Aug. 17, two weeks after an amateur astronomer discovered the supernova. What we're seeing here is the creation of heavy chemical elements like calcium, iron and gold, all of which, on Earth and elsewhere, came from...
NASA Announces Discovery of New Class of Planets
NASA's early afternoon press conference lived up to expectations, announcing two new planetary discoveries in the Neptune-mass range. The planet detected around the star 55 Cancri is one of four now known to orbit there, making 55 Cancri the most complete extra-solar planetary system we've found. Nobody knows whether the new 55 Cancri planet is rocky or gaseous, but its mass -- roughly 18 times that of the Earth -- and its location close to its parent star have many speculating that it formed through the accumulation of smaller rocky bodies. Barbara McArthur of the University of Texas, Austin and colleagues found the planet by studying observations made at the Hobby-Eberly Telescope at McDonald Observatory in West Texas. 55 Cancri continues to loom large among extrasolar planetary systems. To me, the most interesting of its planets is the fourth, a gas giant that orbits roughly at the same distance that Jupiter does from the Sun. With almost 140 extrasolar planets now found, the...
More Information on the mu Arae Planetary Discovery
Lots of background on mu Arae's (second) discovered planet in this press release from the European Southern Observatory. The discovery was made possible by the HARPS (High Accuracy Radial Velocity Planet Searcher) spectrograph attached to ESO's 3.6-meter La Silla telescope in Chile. The planet previously discovered at mu Arae is roughly Jupiter-size and orbits the star every 650 days. The new one, much closer in, has the mass of Uranus, and thus straddles the line between rocky and gas giant worlds. To quote the press release (text in bold as given by ESO): The mass of this planet places it at the boundary between the very large earth-like (rocky) planets and giant planets. As current planetary formation models are still far from being able to account for all the amazing diversity observed amongst the extrasolar planets discovered, astronomers can only speculate on the true nature of the present object. In the current paradigm of giant planet formation, a core is formed first through...
Major Planet Discovery Announcement
Keep your eyes on NASA next Tuesday. SpaceRef.com is carrying a NASA press release that says the agency will announce the 'discovery of a new class of planets' next Tuesday at 1 PM EDT. The press conference will be carried live on NASA television or you can check the Webcast here. Exactly what this is escapes me, but I suspect we're getting into the era of small planet detections, as per the story immediately below. Geoff Marcy and Paul Butler, planet finders extraordinaire, are among those who will appear on the NASA panel.