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Arizona State University
Follow the Elements
Principal Investigator: Ariel Anbar
Arizona State University
Team Website: http://astrobiology.asu.edu/As new criteria are required to prioritize the large and growing list of water-rich environments beyond Earth, the ASU Team looks ahead to the next phase of astrobiological exploration. Because all organisms are comprised of a non-random selection of chemical elements, we must learn, in addition to “following the water” and “following the energy,” to “follow the elements.” The team will focus on two types of elements: bioessential elements such as C, N, S, P and Fe that constitute the raw materials for life as we know it., and short-lived radionuclides such as 26Al and 60Fe, isotopes that may play a key role in determining the water inventories of planets.
The ASU team will conduct three complementary, interdisciplinary research efforts to develop new, more refined criteria to guide the search for life.
The Stoichiometry of Life
- Understanding the relationships between the elemental compositions of organisms and their environments, and the ways in which those relationships shape the habitability of planets.
The Habitability of Water-Rich Environments
- Understanding the impact of water on the availability of bioessential elements on planets and satellites, using geochemical models of water-rock interactions and geophysical models of the dynamics of mass and heat transfer in icy mantles.
- Applying these models to determine the chemical composition of Europa’s subsurface ocean, ancient aqueous solutions on Mars, oceans on icy satellites, and oceans on waterworlds.
Astrophysical Controls on the Elements of Life
- Investigating how astrophysical processes shape the abundances of bioessential elements and radionuclides that affect planetary habitability.
- Seeking to identify an observable proxy for 26Al that would enable quantitative predictions about whether a given star is more likely to host waterworlds or Earth-like planets.
October 1, 2008
- NASA selects new NAI teams through a competitive peer review process. The October 2, 2008 press release announces the fifth round of team selections since the Institute’s founding in 1998. Following selection, NASA executes 5-year Cooperative Agreements with each team's institution. It is expected that the newly-announced teams will begin their terms in early 2009.
- Press Release: NASA Selects New Science Teams for the NAI
- University of Hawaii
- Arizona State University
- Carnegie Institution of Washington
- Pennsylvania State University
- NASA Ames Research Center
- NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
- Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
- Georgia Institute of Technology
- Jet Propulsion Laboratory - Icy Worlds
- Jet Propulsion Laboratory - Titan