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alien foliage02 What Color is Your Alien?

Apparently the vegetable kingdom in Mars, instead of having green for a dominant colour, is of a vivid blood-red tint—H.G. Wells

According to Nancy Y. Kiang (biometeorologist at the NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies) green aliens are so passé. Well, she may have a point. In a fascinating article in Scientific American (April, 2008), Kiang tells us that “light of any color from deep violet through the near-infrared could power photosynthesis.” For instance, the cooler type M stars (red dwarfs) are feeble and planets receive less visible light. Plants might need to be close to black in color to absorb as much light as possible. Young M stars fry planetary surfaces with ultra-violet flares, so many organisms would likely be aquatic to survive. Our sun is type G, and on Earth green generally dominates the color of living plants. Around F-stars, hotter and bluer than our sun, plants might get too much light and would need to reflect much of it, so they would tend to absorb blue light and might look green to yellow to red or violet.

Photosynthesis, says Kiang, adapts to the spectrum of light that reaches an organism; and the spectrum results from the parent star’s radiation spectrum, combined with the filtering effects of the planet’s atmosphere. Kiang further adds that photosynthesis can produce very conspicuous biosignatures (see more below): 1) biologically generated atmospheric gases such as oxygen and its product, ozone; and 2) surface colors that indicate the presence of specialized pigments such as green chlorophyll.

When I first learned about photosynthesis in Grade 3, I thought it was a magical process. Scientists who make it their specialty still do. It is truly one of God’s wonderful gifts to life in this universe. Well, think about it: photosynthesis converts light energy (sunlight) into chemical energy through living organisms. The raw materials include carbon dioxide and water and the end-products include oxygen and (energy rich) carbohydrates, like sucrose, glucose and starch. The process is arguably the most important biochemical pathway on Earth since nearly all life either directly or indirectly depends on it. And like all marvelous things in nature, the pigments that harvest sunlight don’t operate in isolation. They operate “like an array of antennas, each tuned to pick out photons of particular wavelengths,” says Kiang. Chloropalienlandscape08 What Color is Your Alien?hyll preferentially absorbs red and blue light. Carotenoid pigments, responsible for the vibrant reds and yellows of autumn, pick up a slightly different shade of blue. All this energy is funneled to a special “hub” chlorophyll molecule, which splits water and releases oxygen.

How plausible is it for photosynthesis to arise on another planet? The process is so successful on Earth that it remains the foundation for most life (exceptions being organisms that live off methane of oceanic hydrothermal vents, etc.). The majority of life on earth depends on sunlight. Photosynthesis evolved early on in Earth’s history, with the first fossil evidence dating to about 3.4 billion years ago. “The rapidity of its emergence suggests it was no fluke and could arise on other worlds too,” Kiang contends and adds, “As organisms released gases, they changed the very lighting conditions on which they depended,” which meant that hey had to evolve new colors. We can see this in the evolutionary range in pigmentation of simple unicellular life, from the near-infrared absorbing first photosynthetic bacteria to the early blue-green algae, red and brown algae and finally the more evolved green algae. “Studying Earth life to guide our search for life on other worlds is the essence of astrobiology,” said Carl Pilcher, director of the NAI at NASA Ames. “This work broadens our understanding of how life may be detected on Earth-like planets around other stars, while simultaneously improving our understanding of life on Earth.”

Predicting alien plant colors takes experts ranging from astronomers to plant physiologists to biochemists. While the longest wavelength observed in photosynthesis on Earth is about 1,015 nm (in purple anoxygenic bacteria), the laws of physics set no strict upper limit. The limiting factor, according to Kiang, isn’t the feasibility of novel pigments but the light spectrum available at a planet’s surface, which depends mostly on the star type. Astronomers describe what’s called a “habitable zone” around each star. This is a range of orbits where planets can maintain a temperature that supports liquid water. In the solar system of our G star, this includes the orbits of Earth and Mars. The habitable zone of an F star, a hotter star, would be farther out and that of a K and M star, would be closer.

Aside from colors reflected by plants, the following features may provide signs of life (e.g., biosignatures) according to NASA:

  1. Oxygen plus water: even on a lifeless world, light from the parent star produces a small amount of oxygen in a planet’s atmosphere by splitting water vapor. The gas dissipates quickly (e.g., rained out or through oxidation of rocks and volcanic gases). Abundant oxygen therefore signals an additional source;
  2. Ozone: easier to detect, ozone provides an indicator of oxygen, being its product;
  3. Methane plus oxygen: these two are considered an awkward combination, hard to achieve without photosynthesis;
  4. Seasonal cycles: fluctuations of methane suggest life, given that levels tend to remain constant otherwise;
  5. Methyl chloride: produced on Earth from burning of vegetation and the action of sunlight on plankton and seawater chlorine. An M star’s relatively weak radiation might allow the gas to build up to detectable amounts;
  6. Nitrous oxide: released when plant matter decays.
According to Kiang, astronomers are considering four scenarios for life on other planets depending on the age and type of star. These include:
  • Anaerobic ocean life: where the parent star is a young star of any type and the organisms may not produce oxygen and the atmosphere may be mostly other gases like methane;
  • Aerobic ocean life: where the parent star is older and photosynthesis has evolved, building up atmospheric oxygen;
  • Aerobic life on land: the parent star is mature and plants cover the land (like Earth);
  • Anaerobic land life: the star is a quiescent M star, so the UV radiation is negligible and plants wouldn’t produce oxygen.
Finding life on other planets is a fast approaching reality—if it hasn’t already happened by the time I’ve written this. Understanding photosynthesis is one of the keys to designing and interpreting NASA’s exobiology missions. Says Kiang, “our ability to search for life elsewhere in the universe ultimately requires our deepest understanding of life here on Earth.”

Bibliography:

Kiang, N.Y., A. Segura, G. Tinetti, Govindjee, R.E. Blankenship, M. Cohen, J. Siefert, D. Crisp, and V.S. Meadows, 2007: Spectral signatures of photosynthesis II: Co-evolution with other stars and the atmosphere on extrasolar worlds. Astrobiology, 7, 252-274, doi:10.1089/ast.2006.0108. (Abstact: http://pubs.giss.nasa.gov/abstracts/2007/Kiang_etal_2.html) ; PDF: http://pubs.giss.nasa.gov/docs/2007/2007_Kiang_etal_2.pdf)

Giovanna Tinetti, Alfred Vidal-Madjar, Mao-Chang Liang, Jean-Philippe Beaulieu, Yuk Yung, Sean Carey, Robert J. Barber, Jonathan Tennyson, Ignasi Ribas, Nicole Allard, Gilda E. Ballester, David K. Sing & Franck Selsis. 2007. Water Vapour in the Atmosphere of a Transiting Extrasolar Planet. Nature, Vol. 448: 169-171. July, 2007. http://exoplanet.eu/papers/Nature_Tinetti_etal.pdf

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phoenix mars05 Phoenix Landing on Mars
“It is good to renew one’s wonder, said the philosopher. “Space travel has again made children of us all.”—Ray Bradbury (from The Martian Chronicles)

“The Phoenix spacecraft successfully landed in the north arctic plains of Mars today,” Carolyn Porco, Cassini Imaging Team Leader, announced to my friend Danny Bloom. “This is the first landing in 32 years — since the Viking spacecraft made landfall on Mars in 1976 — that we have soft-landed a craft on Mars using retrorockets.”

The lander successfully parachuted and touched down on the surface of Mars Sunday, despite some fears about the spacecraft’s ability to penetrate the atmosphere and remain upright after landing. Had the Phoenix tipped over, it would not have been able to dig into Martian soil, and it would have been impossible for the craft to complete its mission, reported K.C. Jones of InformationWeek .

“I’m floored. I’m absolutely floored,” said Phoenix Project Manager Barry Goldstein of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), in Pasadena, Calif. Mars Society executive director Chris Carberry said that one of the greatest challenges in modern engineering is to land a craft safely on another planet. “The data collected from this mission could have a tremendous impact on planning for future human missions,” he said.

“From the pictures returned, the spacecraft is in a completely uprigphoenix mars04 Phoenix Landing on Marsht position, the solar arrays are perfectly deployed, and the surroundings show no large rocks or boulders but a rather hummocky surface, perhaps created by the action of sub-surface ice,” said Porko. “This spacecraft is not meant to rove but to dig and analyze. So, now begins three months of gradual digging with the spacecraft’s robotic arm and scoop until eventually it reaches the ice layer beneath the surface. The goal [is] to determine if the icy sub-surface environment is rich in organics and suitable for living organisms, and perhaps if there are any organisms living there today. It will be three months of great anticipation.”

“Our long-term goals are to determine whether life ever arose on Mars, to examine climate, characterise geology and prepare for human exploration,” said Peter Smith, Phoenix Project Lead Investigator. “Mars is a cold desert planet with no liquid water on its surface. However, discoveries made by the Mars Odyssey Orbiter in 2002 showed large amounts of subsurface water ice. The Phoenix Lander targets this region.”

“Phoenix will probe the history of liquid water that may have existed in the arctic as recently as 10phoenix mars02 Phoenix Landing on Mars0,000 years ago,” added Smith. “Evidence from other missions suggest that water once flowed in canyons. It is important because all known life forms require it to survive. Chemical experiments will assess the soil’s composition of life-giving elements such as carbon, nitrogen, phosphorus, and hydrogen. Certain bacterial spores lie dormant in cold, dry and airless conditions for millions of years and become activated in favourable conditions. Such dormant microbial colonies may exist in the Martian arctic.”

“Images sent back from the Red Planet by NASA’s Phoenix Mars Lander after its picture-perfect Sunday touchdown provide the first close-up views of a barren landscape honeycombed with cracks that may represent the effects of seasonal freezing and thawing of subsurface ice,” reported J.R. Minkel of Scientific American Online.

The robotic arm camera on board the Phoenix Mars lander features the first motor-adjustable focusing system to be deployed on an inter-planetary spacecraft, Nasa revealed (Chris Cheesman of Amateur Photographer). Scientists are now analyzing photographs captured by the spacecraft, the first taken since it touched down on 25 May. Phoenix’s robotic arm camera aims to provide close-up color images of Martian soil and ice samples that couldphoenix mars01 Phoenix Landing on Mars establish whether the planet could support life. The camera is positioned just above the ‘scoop’ that aims to collect samples dug by the robotic arm, says Cheesman. “The camera has a double Gauss lens system, a design commonly used in 35mm cameras,” explains the space agency. “Images are recorded by a charge-coupled device (CCD) similar to those in consumer digital cameras. The instrument includes sets of red, green and blue light-emitting diodes (LEDs) for illuminating the target area.” Nasa claims that the camera can focus down to 11mm and record images at a resolution of ’23 microns per pixel’ at the closest focusing distance – allowing the camera to show details ‘much finer than the width of a human hair’. The camera is similar to one used on the failed Mars Polar Lander spacecraft but with a revamped illumination system.

The Phoenix also carries a Canadian weather station. The $37 million station is no larger than a phoenix mars03 Phoenix Landing on Marsshoebox and wrapped in a thermal blanket bearing a tiny Maple Leaf flag. The station will help in the search for life-giving water. It’s the first Canadian science instrument to land on the surface of an alien world, said Alicia Chang, of the Associated Press. A Canadian scientific team hopes to spend 90 days studying data sent back from Mars, including daily measurements of temperature, atmospheric pressure, cloud height, humidity and wind speeds. A specially developed laser called a lidar will be used to track clouds around the landing area. Steve MacLean, chief astronaut for the Canadian Space Agency, told the Canadian Press that Canada got involved because of its expertise operating in frigid northern environments.
Yup, I can vouch for that…
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NASA atlantis launch01 NASA Launches Atlantis—Friday Feature

Space, the final frontier…To boldly go where no man has gone before…”—Captain Kirk, Star Trek

Yesterday, the space shuttle Atlantis and its crew of seven astronauts launched “on spectacular plumes of gold-tipped smoke … carrying Europe’s primary contribution to the International Space Station – the Columbus science laboratory” according to NASA. “The lab is filled with racks for experiments and research equipment and has fixtures on its exterior to also host research exposed to the vacuum of space,” continues NASA. “It represents the latest international addition to a facility already made of structures from the United States, Russia and Canada.”

“It shows that there is a real partnership between communities,” NASA Administrator Mike Griffin said. According to NASA, the launch was crucial for the European Space Agency because the Columbus lab represents a cutting edge research facility for Europe and the continent’s first manned spacecraft. “Today we are opening a new chapter for ESA,” said Jean-Jacques Dordain, the European Space Agency director general. “Just as Columbus discovered the New World, with Columbus, we are discovering a whole new world.”

NASA buzz aldrin NASA Launches Atlantis—Friday FeatureThe event brought back stirring memories of NASA moments for me (e.g., the Mercury, Gemini, then Apollo series; man’s first walk on the moon, then the launch of the first space shuttle). So, today, in honor of yesterday’s launch, I dedicate this Friday Feature to the ambitious and highly valuable NASA program; a program that has steadfastly persisted and prevailed over funding cuts, political intrigue, commercial competition, scientific slashing and public apathy.

The International Space Station (ISS) is the largest and most complex international scientific project in history and represents a move of unprecedented scale off plNASA ISS04 NASA Launches Atlantis—Friday Featureanet Earth. The station draws upon the scientific and technological resources of 16 nations: United States, Canada, Japan, Russia, 11 nations of the European Space Agency and Brazil.More than four times as large as the Russian Mir space station and a mass of about 1,040,000 pounds, the ISS measures 356 feet across and 290 feet long, with almost an acre of solar panels providing electrical power to six state-of-the-art laboratories. The station orbits at an altitude of 250 statute miles with an inclination of 51.6 degrees. This orbit provides accessibility by all the international partners.

Assembled in orbit, the ISS is an example of the first hands-on work in space, involving more spacewalks than ever before and a new generation of space robotics. About 850 clock hours of spacewalks were required by Russian and U.S. astronauts over five years to maintain and assemble the station (which is scheduled to be complete by 2010 according to the Vision for Space Exploration). The United States developed and currently operates the station. International partners contributed key elements to the ISS including Canada’s 55-foot long robotic arm for maintenance and assembly, Japan’s laboratory with attached exposed exterior platform, Russia’s research modules and spacecraft, and the European Space Agency’s pressurized laboratory.

NASA ISS02 NASA Launches Atlantis—Friday FeatureThe station represents an unprecedented state-of-the-art laboratory complex in orbit, more than four times the size and with almost 60 times the electrical power for experiments — critical for research capability — of Russia’s Mir. Research in the station’s six laboratories have already lead to discoveries in medicine, materials and fundamental science that will benefit people all over the world. Through its research and technology, the station also serves as an indispensable step in preparation for future human space exploration. Research currently being performed aboard the station includes: investigations in protein crystals; tissue culture; life in low gravity; flames, fluids and metal in space; the nature of space; observations of Earth; and potential for commercialization.The first crew to live aboard the International Space Station, commanded by U.S. astronaut Bill Shepherd and including Russian cosmonauts Yuri Gidzenko as Soyuz Commander and Sergei Krikalev as Flight Engineer, was launched in early 2000 on a Russian Soyuz spacecraft.

On January 14, 2004, President Bush George W. Bush announced the Vision for Space Exploration, which represented the U.S. space policyUnited States space policy. It was seen as a response to the Space Shuttle Columbia disaster, the state of human spaceflight at NASA, and a way to regain public enthusiasm for space exploration.
The Vision calls for the space program to:

In a study by Zogby International of what Americans think of the NASANASA budget projection NASA Launches Atlantis—Friday Feature space program, 44% of respondents thought that tax dollars spent on the program should remain the same, 32% thought it should be increased, 16% thought it should be decreased and 4% wanted it scrapped altogether.

I’ve heard many a person argue against the apparent profligate spending of the U.S. government on the NASA space program at the expense of housing, health, and education (funny, I don’t hear them complaining about the excessive amount spent on the military). Benefits of the program to humanity are doubtful at best, they complain. Who cares about space, the existence of planets in the Vega system or dark matter when we have so many problems to fix right here on Earth? This practical though myopic view has always been the bane of research, by posing the challenge to defend its value NOW. Research doesn’t work that way (hardly anything of value works that way); discoveries often occur serendipitously (e.g., Fleming’s discovery of penicillin); and often following many years of arduous and dedicated work. NASA’s research is no different. Its entire space program is based on unknowns and “what ifs”, on faith and on hope and ultimately on a vision of the future, a dream.

I have and always will support the NASA program… their dream. I too am a dreamer. Aren’t we all? Isn’t that our very nature? To dream?

NASA, better than any other organization, whether private or government-funded, represents humanity’s eternal dream to understand our universe and ultimately ourselves. We have always been and will continue to be explorers, whether it was Jacques Cartier who sailed across inclement seas up the Gulf of Saint Lawrence to discover a primitive Canada, Jacques Cousteau who dove the abysmal depths of a vast sea to coax out its dark secrets, or Captain Jacques Quasar who sailed the solar winds of the Milky Way Galaxy to find sentient alien life and ultimately answer the question of who and what we are. What program better represents our yearning for knowledge, understanding, and ultimately wisdom? The space program has always been about humanity’s search for meaning in an existentialist chaos of apparent vacuum. What is the nature of our existence? Why are we here? Our outward journey has always been ultimately about coming home.

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