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    Astrobiology_A Very Short Introduction

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      W. T. Sullivan, J. A. Baross (eds). Planets and Life: The Emerging Science of Astrobiology. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007).

      The development of astrobiology from the 1950s onwards is described by: S. J. Dick, J. E. Strick. The Living Universe: NASA and the Development of Astrobiology. (New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 2004).

      An old classic on the nature of life is: E. Schrödinger. What Is Life? (1944; Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2012).

      Chapter 2: From stardust to planets, the abodes for life

      A readable discussion of modern Big Bang theory is given by: C. Lineweaver, T. Davis. 2005. Misconceptions about the Big Bang. Scientific American 292: 36–45.

      A popular account of Arthur Holmes’s quest to find the age of the Earth is: C. Lewis. The Dating Game: One Man’s Search for the Age of the Earth. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2012).

      Chapter 3: Origins of life and environment

      The science of the origin of life is described by: R. M. Hazen. Genesis: The Scientific Quest for Life’s Origin. (Washington, DC: Joseph Henry Press, 2005).

      A lucid description of the early evolution of life on Earth is: A. H. Knoll. Life on a Young Planet: The First Three Billion Years of Evolution on Earth. (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2003).

      Chapter 4: From slime to the sublime

      The Earth’s formation, evolution, and habitability are covered in: C. H. Langmuir, W. S. Broecker. How to Build a Habitable Planet: The Story of Earth from the Big Bang to Humankind. (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2012).

      Chapter 5: Life: a genome’s way of making more and fitter genomes

      A widely used introductory textbook on modern microbiology is: M. T. Madigan et al. Brock Biology of Microorganisms. (San Francisco: Benjamin Cummings, 2012).

      The effects of life on the Earth’s chemistry on a global level are described in the following textbook: W. H. Schlesinger, E. S. Bernhardt. Biogeochemistry, Third Edition: An Analysis of Global Change. (San Diego: Academic Press, 2013).

      Chapter 6: Life in the Solar System

      The planets of the Solar System and their habitability are described in the following textbook: J. J. Lissauer, I. de Pater. Fundamental Planetary Science: Physics, Chemistry and Habitability. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2013).

      Chapter 7: Far-off worlds, distant suns

      A readable book that discusses the search for habitable exoplanets is: J. F. Kasting. How to Find a Habitable Planet. (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2010).

      Chapter 8: Controversies and prospects

      The controversial but engrossing book that argues for the scarcity of complex life is: P. D. Ward, D. Brownlee. Rare Earth: Why Complex Life is Uncommon in the Universe. (New York: Copernicus, 2000).

      Index

      A

      acetylene on Titan 106

      adaptive optics 113

      aeons on Mars 90

      age of the Earth 25–6

      albedo of the Earth 56

      Aldebaran (star) 18, 20

      ALH84001 meteorite 98–9

      Alpha-Centauri B 112

      alteration minerals 93–4

      aluminium-26 atoms 22–3

      Ames Research Center 1

      amino acids 76

      ammonia (NH3) 12, 107–9

      Andromeda galaxy 15

      anti-biosignatures 119

      Apex Chert rock formation, Australia 42

      archaea 66–9, 76, 78, 80

      Archaean aeon 32, 41, 46–8, 50–1

      Aristotle 3

      asteroid impacts 2, 24, 25, 30, 61–2, 96, 126 (see also meteorites)

      astrometry 111

      atmosphere 84–5

      on Earth 28, 32–4, 44–53, 54, 55, 118–19, 125

      on exoplanets 59, 117–19

      on Mars 84, 85, 89–90, 94–6, 97

      on Pluto 108

      on Titan (moon of Saturn) 103–4

      on Triton (moon of Neptune) 107

      on Venus 84, 85–8

      atoms common to life 9–10

      ATP (adenosine triphosphate) 35

      B

      bacteria 66–9, 75–6, 78, 98 (see also cyanobacteria)

      survival in extreme heat 79–80

      banded iron formations 50

      Bernal, J. Desmond 6

      Betelgeuse 19

      Big Bang 14, 16–17

      bioastronomy 5–6

      biomarkers 42–3, 54

      biomass 49, 63–4, 102, 108

      biomolecules 70–1, 73

      chirality 37–9

      biosignatures 118–19

      biospheres 60, 63–5, 115, 121

      black dwarfs 19

      black holes 20

      body structures 60

      ‘boring billion’ 53–5

      brain mass, proportional 122–3

      Brasier, Martin 42

      Brock, Thomas 79–80

      Brownlee, Don 125

      Budyko, Mikhail 56

      Buick, Roger 40

      C

      Callisto (moon of Jupiter) 102

      Cambrian Explosion 54, 59, 60

      cap carbonates 57

      carbohydrates 71, 78

      carbon, organic 10, 33–6, 39–40, 42, 50–52, 55, 74

      carbon assimilation experiment 96

      carbon-based life 9–10

      carbon dioxide 11, 32, 34

      in the Earth’s atmosphere 45–7, 51, 57

      greenhouse effect 45–8, 85–6, 95, 116

      in the habitable zone 117, 129

      on Mars 84, 85, 89, 94–6

      on Venus 84, 85, 86

      carbonate–silicate cycle 47–8

      Cassini–Huygens mission 104–5

      cells 58, 65–70, 78

      circulation 8

      Ceres (largest asteroid) 83, 99

      Charon (moon of Pluto) 108

      chemical elements 65

      chemical weathering 93

      chemiosmosis 35

      chemoheterotrophs 74–5

      Chicxulub, Mexico 61–2

      chirality 37–9

      Chiron 29–30

      chlorine 58–9

      chromosomes 69–70

      Chyba, Christopher 9

      Cleland, Carol 9

      climate

      on Mars 94–6

      regulation 47–8

      CO2 see carbon dioxide

      Cocconi, Guiseppe 120

      coherent energy 6–7

      continents, formation 28–9

      continuously habitable zone (CHZ) 115

      convergent evolution 122

      Copernican Principle 125–6

      coronograph 113

      Cosmic Connection (Sagan) 13

      Cosmic Microwave Background 16–17

      cosmobiology 6

      Cosmotheoros (Huygens) 4

      Creataceous–Paleogene mass extinction 61–2

      Crick, Francis 72

      cryovolcanism 107–8

      Curiosity Rover 89–90

      cyanobacteria 42–3, 49–50, 68–9, 76

      D

      Darwin, Charles 8–9, 31, 126

      Dawn mission 99

      definition of astrobiology 1–2, 5

      Democritus 3

      density of exoplanets 114–15

      direct detection of exoplanets 113–15

      dissipative structures 8

      DNA 32–3, 36, 69–70, 71–3

      DNA sequencing 77–8

      Doppler shift 111–12

      Drake, Frank (Drake Equation) 120–22

      dropstones 56

      dust particles 10

      dwarfs 19–21, 106, 116–17

      E

      Earth 84

      age 25–6

      atmosphere 28, 32–4, 44–53, 54, 55, 118–19, 125

      basis of life 9, 12, 63–70

      earliest aeon 28–36

      development of intelligent life 122, 124

      mass extinctions 60–2

      origin of life 1–2, 31–43

      as a ‘Pale Blue Dot’ 118

      position 14–15, 26–7


      Snowball Earth hypothesis 55–8

      uniqueness 3–4, 125–7

      Ediacarans 54

      Einstein, Albert 113

      elements

      chemical 65

      common to life 9–10, 89

      isotopes 22–3, 25–6

      non-metallic 12

      in stars 17–18, 19, 21, 117

      enantiomers 38–9

      Enceladus (moon of Saturn) 103, 128

      Encephalization Quotient (EQ) 122–3

      endosymbiosis 69

      energy 6–9, 87, 106

      infrared 45

      life-giving 65

      metabolic 35, 58, 73–5

      in photons 18

      precursor for life 58

      entropy 6–8

      eukaryotes 59, 66–70, 76, 78, 80

      Europa (moon of Jupiter) 100–2, 128–9

      ice on 2–3

      European Space Agency 114

      evolution 8–9, 48, 75

      during ‘boring billion’ 53–5

      chemical 31

      convergent 122

      diversity in 60

      exobiology 5

      exoplanets 3, 24–5

      atmosphere on 59, 117–19

      detection 110–15

      evidence of life on 115–19

      intelligent life on 120–4

      expansion of the universe 16–17

      extinctions, mass 60–2

      extraterrestrial intelligence (SETI) 120–4

      extraterrestrial life evidence of 2–3, 4

      intelligent 120–4

      likelihood of carbon base 9–10

      likelihood of silicon base 10–11

      probability 16

      significance 12–13

      theories about 3–4

      extremophiles 79–81

      F

      faint young Sun paradox 44–5

      Fermi, Enrico (Fermi Paradox) 123–4

      fluorine 58–9

      fossils 41–2, 53–4, 98

      G

      G-type stars 125–6

      galactic filaments 16

      galactic habitable zone (GHZ) 15, 117–18, 126

      galaxies 15–16

      birth of 17

      Galilean moons of Jupiter 99–102

      Galileo 126

      Galileo spacecraft 2–3, 101, 118

      gametes 69–70

      Ganymede (moon of Jupiter) 102

      gas chromatograph mass spectrometer (Viking lander) 97

      gas exchange experiment (Viking lander) 96–7

      gas giants 23–4

      gene transfers 77, 79

      genetics 75–9

      genomes 8, 36–7

      giant impact hypothesis 26

      giant planets 23–4

      glaciations 55–8

      Great Oxidation Event 48–53

      greenhouse effect 45–8, 85–6, 116

      on Mars 95

      gullies on Mars 91

      H

      habitable zone (HZ) 115–17

      Hadean aeon 28–36

      Haldane, J. B. S. 32

      half-life 22, 25

      Hawking, Stephen 126

      helium 17–18, 20

      Herrmann, Joachim 5

      Hertzsprung–Russell (H–R) diagram 20–21

      Holmes, Arthur 25–6

      homochirality 39

      Hooker, Joseph 31

      hot Jupiters 24–5, 110, 112

      Hubble, Edwin 16

      Huntress, Wes 5

      Huygens, Christiaan 4, 104–5

      hydrocarbons on Titan 106

      hydrogen 17, 20, 52–3, 88

      hydrogen bombs 18

      hydrogen peroxide 90

      hydrothermal vents 34–5, 42

      I

      ice

      density 11–12

      on Europa (moon of Jupiter) 2–3

      formation 55–7

      ice giants 23–4

      impact erosion 96

      impacts with Earth 28–30, 33–4, 61–2

      indirect detection of exoplanets 110–13

      infrared radiation 45–6, 87, 93

      inner planets, water on 84

      intelligent life on exoplanets 120–4

      interferometry 114

      intraterrestrial life 64

      Io (moon of Jupiter) 100

      iron 50, 51

      iron-60

      atoms 23

      isotopes 22–3

      radioactive 25–6

      Isua, Greenland 39–40

      J

      Jupiter 65, 85

      formation 24

      moons 2–3, 99–102, 128–9

      orbit 111

      as protection for Earth 126–7

      resonance with Saturn 30

      K

      K stars 116

      Kant, Immanuel 4, 22

      Kelvin scale 20

      Kepler, Johannes 3–4

      Kepler mission 112–13, 126

      Kirschvink, Joe 57

      Klein, Harold ‘Chuck’ 97

      Kuiper Belt objects (KBOs) 107, 108

      L

      labelled release experiment 97

      Lafleur, Laurence 4–5

      Lake Vostok, Antarctica 80–1

      Laplace, Simon-Pierre (Marquis de Laplace) 22

      Laplace resonance 100

      Late Heavy Bombardment 30, 39

      lead isotopes, age 25–6

      Lederberg, Joshua 5

      life

      characteristics 6–9

      origin on Earth 31–43

      precursors 58–9, 65

      light

      bending 113

      cancelling 114

      light years 15

      lightning, creation of organic molecules 32

      Linnaeus, Carolus 66

      lipids 71

      liquid water 10, 11–12, 65, 82–6, 89, 90–6, 99–103, 106, 115–16, 119

      Local Group 15

      Lowell, Percival 4

      M

      M dwarfs 116–17

      MacGregor, Alexander 32

      magnesium-26 atoms 22–3

      magnetic field 56

      on Europa 101

      magnetite 56, 98–9

      main sequence 20–1, 44, 115–16

      Mariner missions to Mars 88–9

      Mars 84–6, 88–99

      in the habitable zone 116

      intelligent life 4

      signs of ancient life 2

      Mars Exploration Rovers 94

      Mars Science Laboratory see Curiosity Rover

      mass extinctions 60–2

      Mayor, Michel 111–12

      medium for biochemical processes 11

      Mercury 84–5

      messenger RNA (mRNA) 73

      metabolism 35, 58, 73–5

      metallicity of stars 117–18

      meteorites 25, 33–4 (see also asteroid impacts)

      age 26

      from Mars 97–9

      methane 55, 90

      atmospheric 46–7

      on Titan 104–6

      Methanopyrus kandleri 80

      Metrodorus 3

      microbes 64–5, 127

      extraterrestrial 2

      gene transfer 77, 79

      survival in extreme heat 29, 79–80

      microbial conjugation 69

      microbial mats 40–1

      microfossils 41–2, 98

      microlensing 113

      Milky Way galaxy 15, 16

      Miller, Stanley 32–3

      Mitchell, Peter 35

      molecular clocks 78–9

      molecules, organic 42–3

      Moon 14

      craters 30

      formation 26–7, 28

      Morrison, Philip 120

      Murchison meteorite 33

      N

      NASA 1, 2, 5, 88–9, 99, 101, 112, 114, 118, 126

      natural selection 8, 75

      Nazca plate, South Pacific 47

      nebular hypothesis 22–3, 25

      negative entropy 7

      Neoproterozoic glaciations 55, 56, 57

      Neptune

      distance 15

      formation 24

    &nbs
    p; moons 106–8

      orbits 30

      neutrons 19

      Nice model 30

      non-metallic elements 12

      North Pole, Australia 40–1

      nuclear fusion 17–18, 19, 21

      nucleotides 71–3

      O

      oceanic plates 47

      Of the Plurality of Worlds (Whewell) 4

      Oort Cloud 126

      Oparin, Alexander 32

      organic carbon 10, 33–6, 39–40, 42, 50–2, 55, 74

      organic molecules 32–6

      origin of life on Earth 31–43

      Orion Arm of the Milky Way 15

      outflow channels on Mars 91–3

      oxygen 32

      on Europa 102

      on exoplanets 127

      levels 48–53, 54, 55

      precursor for life 58–9

      oxygenation time 59

      ozone layer 52

      P

      PAHs (polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons) 98

      ‘Pale Blue Dot’ 118

      Paleaoproterozoic glaciations 55, 56, 57

      panspermia 31

      Patterson, Clair 26

      Pauling, Linus 7, 78

      PCR (polymerase chain reaction) technology 80

      Pelagibacter ubique 64–5

      Permian–Triassic mass extinction 61

      Phanerozoic Aeon 54

      photons in the Sun 18

      photosynthesis 49–51

      phylogeny 77–9

      Pikaia 54

      planetary embryos 24

      planetary migration 25

      planetary nebulae 18–19

      planetesimals 24

      plate tectonics 48, 127

      Plato 3

      pluralism 3

      Pluto 108–9

      primeval lead 26

      primordial soup 32

      prokaryotes 67–8

      protein synthesis 77

      proteins 71, 76

      Proterozoic Aeon 55

      proton gradient 35

      Proxima Centauri 15

      Q

      Queloz, Didier 111–12

      R

      racemic mixture 38

      radial velocity method 111

      radioactive isotopes 25–6

      radiogenic heat 101

      Rare Earth Hypothesis 125–7

      recombination 70

      red dwarfs 21

      red giants 18

      red supergiants 19

      redox titration 53

      reductants 52

      ribosomes 68

      in RNA (rRNA) 77

      RNA 36–7, 39, 71–3, 77

      rocky planets 21, 23

      runaway greenhouse effect on Venus 86–7

      runaway limit 87–8

      S

      Sagan, Carl 13, 14, 127

      sample return missions 128–9

      Saturn

      formation 24

      moons 82, 102–6, 129

      orbit 111

      resonance with Jupiter 30

     


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