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Commentary: Destroying Astrobiology Would be a 'Disaster':Posted By: Martha Buffett
Rocco Mancinelli The search for potentially inhabited planets beyond our solar system includes laboratory and field investigations of the origins and early evolution of life, and studies of the potential of life to adapt to future challenges, both on earth and in space. As such, astrobiology has never been, nor should it ever be, uniquely tied to a Mars Sample return mission, or human exploration of Mars. The broad interdisciplinary character of astrobiology compels us to strive for the most comprehensive and inclusive understanding of biological, planetary, and cosmic phenomena. NASA essentially developed astrobiology as a whole new interdisciplinary scientific field from scratch. It now has thousands of researchers, many international affiliates, multiple peer reviewed journals and is growing. Even NSF has been amazed by what NASA's astrobiology program has accomplished. Abandoning this field now would undermine some of the most exciting science NASA has going. The primary reasons NASA developed astrobiology was to impact all of NASA's missions including Earth science (planetary ecology), astrophysics (Kepler is a perfect example), and solar system exploration (Mars is just one example). Human exploration was always known to be an activity that would occur in the far distant future. Mars missions are not going away. The queue that exists continues to grow. A new Mars Scout mission Announcement of Opportunity is about to be released. Only by funding the science and instrument programs will future principal investigators be able to truly look for the "fingerprints of life." To address the specific points of impact on missions, we have only just arrived at the point where instruments aimed at understanding the fingerprints of life are now being built for the Mars Science Laboratory (e.g., Raman and XRD). It takes about eight years to really impact a mission cycle. The proposed cutbacks now in the instrument and experiments programs (ASTID and ASTEP) would terminate the effort just as we are starting to make real progress. Astrobiology sets an agenda for inspiring the next generation of planetary explorers and stewards to sustain the NASA vision and mission. Astrobiology has generated orders of magnitude more results, visibility, and above all, more sources of education to the young than any space science discipline ever before. If the cuts come to pass, it will be devastating. Consequences will include:
This will be a total waste. Everyone has a stake in astrobiology. Destroying astrobiology will be a national disaster to an extent that the United States is unlikely to recover from it. It will have enduring consequences on the country's science leadership in the world. The astrobiology budget cuts will destroy the foundation of this leadership by annihilating an entire generation of researchers, their research, and the new generation they were forming. COMMENTARY: Astrobiology Budget in Peril Visit SPACE.com for more space-related news including videos, launch coverage and interactive experiences. Explore our huge collection of Image Galleries, view our Image of the Day and Amazing Images. Follow the latest developments in the search for life in our universe in our SETI: Search for Life section. Join the community, sign up for our free daily email newsletter, listen to our Podcasts, and check out our RSS feeds today! Courtesy Of: Yahoo! News The information reported above is property of Yahoo! inc. and reprinted or modified with legitimate permission. We thank Yahoo! inc. for the kind cooperation with us and other shareholders. |
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