To better support the broad, interdisciplinary field of astrobiology – the study of the origin, evolution, distribution, and future of life in the universe – NASA is announcing a new programmatic infrastructure for the Astrobiology Program.The 2022 Astrobiology Science Conference (AbSciCon) will be held May 15-20 in Atlanta, GA.Watch OSIRIS-REx & the Origin of Life on the NASA Astrobiology YouTube channel at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HCrwF4oBCvkEarth as seen on July 6, 2015 from a distance of one million miles by a NASA scientific camera aboard the Deep Space Climate Observatory spacecraft.
NASA Selects New Science Teams for Astrobiology ResearchSelections for the Interdisciplinary Consortia for Astrobiology Research (ICAR) program.01/04
AbSciCon 2022AbSciCon has been postponed to 202202/04
OSIRIS-REx & the Origin of LifeNASA astrobiologists Dr. Jason Dworkin and Dr. Scott Sandford explain the importance of the OSIRIS-REx mission in the quest to understand the role that asteroids and other small bodies play in the origins of life on Earth.03/04
Astrobiology Letter to the CommunityA message to the research community from the Astrobiology Program04/04
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Atlas V-541 at Cape Canaveral
NASA MISSIONSMars 2020

NASA's Mars 2020 mission is the next step in NASA's long-term robotic exploration of Mars. The rover Perseverance will provide important data relevant to astrobiology research, along with a vast amount of geological information about the landing site and the planet at large that will help put the astrobiological data into context.

Perseverance will not be looking for organisms living on Mars today. However, the rover will collect data that could be used to identify biosignatures of ancient microbial life.

What really sets this mission apart is that Perseverance will be collecting a suite of samples to be returned to Earth via a Mars Sample Return mission. The opportunity to bring back samples from another planet will allow our researchers to interrogate them with all of the sophistication and thoroughness that Earth-based instrumentation provides.

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