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2.
Astrobiology ; 19(5): 696-708, 2019 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31046417

RESUMO

This article describes a multifaceted approach to delivering results from current research in astrobiology to visitors at Pacific Science Center, along with the evaluated results of the impact of the work. Content was delivered by (1) training scientists to communicate effectively with the public, (2) providing the trained scientists with venues to engage with the public, and (3) creating two Science on Sphere shows that highlight key tenants scientists are investigating, a hands-on activity to facilitate interactive learning, and a temporary exhibit that highlights current research on the topic. Evaluation of visitors who engaged with each element demonstrates that the content had a large impact on both the increase in knowledge of the visitors and the increase of interest in the topic.


Assuntos
Exobiologia/organização & administração , Disseminação de Informação/métodos , Colaboração Intersetorial , Treinamento por Simulação , Exobiologia/educação , Exobiologia/tendências , Setor Informal
3.
Astrobiology ; 19(3): 347-368, 2019 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30840500

RESUMO

Short-term and long-term science plans were developed as part of the strategic planning process used by the Biologic Analog Science Associated with Lava Terrains (BASALT) science team to conduct two Mars-simulation missions investigating basalt habitability at terrestrial volcanic analog sites in 2016. A multidisciplinary team of scientists generated and codified a range of scientific hypotheses distilled into a Science Traceability Matrix (STM) that defined the set of objectives pursued in a series of extravehicular activity (EVA) campaigns performed across multiple field deployments. This STM was used to guide the pre-deployment selection of sampling stations within the selected Mars analog sites on the Earth based on precursor site information such as multispectral imagery. It also informed selection of hand-held instruments and observational data to collect during EVA to aid sample selection through latency-impacted interaction with an Earth-based Science Support Team. A significant portion of the pre-deployment strategic planning activities were devoted to station selection, ultimately the locations used for sample collection and EVA planning. During development of the EVAs, the BASALT science team identified lessons learned that could be used to inform future missions and analog activities, including the critical need for high-resolution precursor imagery that would enable the selection of stations that could meet the scientific objectives outlined in the STM.


Assuntos
Exobiologia/organização & administração , Atividade Extraespaçonave , Marte , Simulação de Ambiente Espacial/métodos , Planejamento Estratégico , Exobiologia/métodos , Exobiologia/tendências , Previsões
4.
Astrobiology ; 19(3): 478-496, 2019 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30840502

RESUMO

There is a synergistic relationship between analog field testing and the deep space telecommunication capabilities necessary for future human exploration. The BASALT (Biologic Analog Science Associated with Lava Terrains) research project developed and implemented a telecommunications architecture that serves as a high-fidelity analog of future telecommunication capabilities for Mars. This paper presents the architecture and its constituent elements. The rationale for the various protocols and radio frequency (RF) link types required to enable an interdisciplinary field mission are discussed, and the performance results from the BASALT field tests are provided. Extravehicular Informatics Backpacks (EVIB) designed for BASALT and tested by human subjects are also discussed, and the proceeding sections show how these prototype extravehicular activity (EVA) information systems can augment future human exploration. The paper concludes with an aggregate analysis of the data product types and data volumes generated, transferred, and utilized by the ground team and explorers over the course of the field deployments.


Assuntos
Exobiologia/organização & administração , Meio Ambiente Extraterreno , Marte , Voo Espacial/organização & administração , Telecomunicações/organização & administração , Exobiologia/tendências , Previsões , Humanos , Sistemas de Informação/organização & administração , Sistemas de Informação/tendências , Voo Espacial/tendências , Simulação de Ambiente Espacial/métodos , Telecomunicações/tendências , Estados Unidos , United States National Aeronautics and Space Administration
5.
Astrobiology ; 19(3): 462-477, 2019 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30840504

RESUMO

Exploration analog field tests, missions, and deployments enable the integration and validation of new and experimental concepts and/or technologies through strategic experimental design. The results of these operations often create new capabilities for exploration and increase confidence in, and credibility of, emerging technologies, usually at very low cost and risk to the test subjects involved. While these experiments resemble missions 10-30 years into the future, insights obtained are often of immediate value. Knowledge gained in the field translates into strategic planning data to assist long-range exploration planners, and planners influence the experimental design of field deployments, creating a synergistic relationship. The Biologic Analog Science Associated with Lava Terrains (BASALT) communication architecture is a high-fidelity analog program that emulates conditions impacting future explorers on the martian surface. This article provides (1) a brief historical review of past analog operations that deliberately used elements of a flight-like telecommunication infrastructure to add fidelity to the test, (2) samples of the accomplishments made through analog operations, and (3) potentially significant deep-space telecommunication insights gained from the BASALT program in support of future extravehicular activity exploration of Mars. This article is paired with and complements Miller et al. in this issue which focuses on the telecommunication infrastructure utilized by the BASALT team during the field deployment.


Assuntos
Exobiologia/organização & administração , Marte , Comunicações Via Satélite/organização & administração , Voo Espacial/organização & administração , Simulação de Ambiente Espacial , Astronautas , Comunicação , Exobiologia/história , Exobiologia/tendências , Previsões , História do Século XX , Humanos , Comunicações Via Satélite/história , Comunicações Via Satélite/tendências , Voo Espacial/história , Voo Espacial/tendências , Planejamento Estratégico , Estados Unidos , United States National Aeronautics and Space Administration
6.
Astrobiology ; 19(3): 440-461, 2019 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30840505

RESUMO

Future human missions to Mars are expected to emphasize scientific exploration. While recent Mars rover missions have addressed a wide range of science objectives, human extravehicular activities (EVAs), including the Apollo missions, have had limited experience with science operations. Current EVAs are carefully choreographed and guided continuously from Earth with negligible delay in communications between crew and flight controllers. Future crews on Mars will be expected to achieve their science objectives while operating and coordinating with a science team back on Earth under communication latency and bandwidth restrictions. The BASALT (Biologic Analog Science Associated with Lava Terrains) research program conducted Mars analog science on Earth to understand the concept of operations and capabilities needed to support these new kinds of EVAs. A suite of software tools (Minerva) was used for planning and executing all BASALT EVAs, supporting text communication across communication latency, and managing the collection of operational and scientific EVA data. This paper describes the support capabilities provided by Minerva to cope with various geospatial and temporal constraints to support the planning and execution phases of the EVAs performed during the BASALT research program. The results of this work provide insights on software needs for future science-driven planetary EVAs.


Assuntos
Exobiologia/organização & administração , Meio Ambiente Extraterreno , Marte , Voo Espacial/organização & administração , Simulação de Ambiente Espacial/métodos , Astronautas , Comunicação , Planeta Terra , Exobiologia/métodos , Exobiologia/tendências , Previsões , Humanos , Comunicações Via Satélite , Software , Voo Espacial/tendências , Planejamento Estratégico , Fatores de Tempo
7.
Astrobiology ; 19(3): 426-439, 2019 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30840509

RESUMO

Science-driven, human spaceflight missions of the future will rely on regular and interactive communication between Earth- and space-based teams during activity in which astronauts work directly on Mars or other planetary surfaces (extravehicular activity, EVA). The Biologic Analog Science Associated with Lava Terrains (BASALT) project conducted simulated human missions to Mars, complete with realistic one-way light time (OWLT) communication latency. We discuss the modes of communication used by the Mars- and Earth-based teams, including text, audio, video, and still imagery. Real-time communication between astronauts in the field (extravehicular, EV) and astronauts in a communication relay station (intravehicular, IV) was broadcast over OWLT, providing important contextual information to the Science Backroom Team (SBT) in Mission Control. Collaborative communication between the Earth- and Mars-based teams, however, requires active communication across latency via the Mission Log. We provide descriptive statistics of text communication between IV and SBT in a high-fidelity, scientifically driven analog for human space exploration. Over an EVA, the SBT sent an average of ∼23 text messages containing recommendations, requests, and answers to questions, while the science-focused IV crew member (IV2) sent an average of ∼38 text messages. Though patterns varied, communication between the IV and SBT teams tended to be highest during ∼50-150 min into the EVA, corresponding to the candidate sample search and presampling instrument survey phases, and then decreased dramatically after minute ∼200 during the sample collection phase. Generally, the IV2 and SBT used ∼4.6 min to craft a reply to a direct question or comment, regardless of message length or OWLT, offering a valuable glimpse into actual time-to-reply. We discuss IV2-SBT communication within the context of case examples from an EVA during which communication failures affected operations in the field. Finally, we offer recommendations for communication practices for use in future analogs and, perhaps, science-driven human spaceflight.


Assuntos
Comunicação , Exobiologia/organização & administração , Atividade Extraespaçonave , Marte , Comunicações Via Satélite , Astronautas , Planeta Terra , Exobiologia/tendências , Previsões , Humanos , Simulação de Ambiente Espacial , Fatores de Tempo
8.
Astrobiology ; 18(2): 224-243, 2018 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29377716

RESUMO

The UK Centre for Astrobiology (UKCA) was set up in 2011 as a virtual center to contribute to astrobiology research, education, and outreach. After 5 years, we describe this center and its work in each of these areas. Its research has focused on studying life in extreme environments, the limits of life on Earth, and implications for habitability elsewhere. Among its research infrastructure projects, UKCA has assembled an underground astrobiology laboratory that has hosted a deep subsurface planetary analog program, and it has developed new flow-through systems to study extraterrestrial aqueous environments. UKCA has used this research backdrop to develop education programs in astrobiology, including a massive open online course in astrobiology that has attracted over 120,000 students, a teacher training program, and an initiative to take astrobiology into prisons. In this paper, we review these activities and others with a particular focus on providing lessons to others who may consider setting up an astrobiology center, institute, or science facility. We discuss experience in integrating astrobiology research into teaching and education activities. Key Words: Astrobiology-Centre-Education-Subsurface-Analog research. Astrobiology 18, 224-243.


Assuntos
Planeta Terra , Educação/organização & administração , Exobiologia/educação , Meio Ambiente Extraterreno , Educação/história , Educação/métodos , Educação a Distância , Exobiologia/história , Exobiologia/métodos , Exobiologia/organização & administração , História do Século XXI , Reino Unido
10.
Microbes Environ ; 29(3): 243-9, 2014 Sep 17.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25130881

RESUMO

The National Research Council (NRC) has recently recognized the International Space Station (ISS) as uniquely suitable for furthering the study of microbial species in closed habitats. Answering the NRC's call for the study, in particular, of uncommon microbial species in the ISS, and/or of those that have significantly increased or decreased in number, space microbiologists have begun capitalizing on the maturity, speed, and cost-effectiveness of molecular/genomic microbiological technologies to elucidate changes in microbial populations in the ISS and other closed habitats. Since investigators can only collect samples infrequently from the ISS itself due to logistical reasons, Earth analogs, such as spacecraft-assembly clean rooms, are used and extensively characterized for the presence of microbes. Microbiologists identify the predominant, problematic, and extremophilic microbial species in these closed habitats and use the ISS as a testbed to study their resistance to extreme extraterrestrial environmental conditions. Investigators monitor the microbes exposed to the real space conditions in order to track their genomic changes in response to the selective pressures present in outer space (external to the ISS) and the spaceflight (in the interior of the ISS). In this review, we discussed the presence of microbes in space research-related closed habitats and the resistance of some microbial species to the extreme environmental conditions of space.


Assuntos
Sistemas Ecológicos Fechados , Microbiologia Ambiental , Exobiologia , Meio Ambiente Extraterreno , Exobiologia/organização & administração , Humanos , Estados Unidos , United States National Aeronautics and Space Administration , Recursos Humanos
12.
Astrobiology ; 14(4): 271-6, 2014 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24684174

RESUMO

We report on the NASA Astrobiology Institute-funded Workshop Without Walls entitled "Stellar Stoichiometry," hosted by the "Follow the Elements" team at Arizona State University in April 2013. We describe several innovative practices we adopted that made effective use of the Workshop Without Walls videoconferencing format, including use of information technologies, assignment of scientific tasks before the workshop, and placement of graduate students in positions of authority. A companion article will describe the scientific results arising from the workshop. Our intention here is to suggest best practices for future Workshops Without Walls.


Assuntos
Congressos como Assunto , Exobiologia/educação , Exobiologia/organização & administração , Internet , Estados Unidos , United States National Aeronautics and Space Administration
13.
RNA Biol ; 11(3): 207-9, 2014.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24572623

RESUMO

The beginning of the space age in the late 1950s gave rise to innovative and interdisciplinary research concepts and perspectives, including the concept of "exobiology" as a way to approach the fundamental aspects of biology through a study of life outside of the Earth, if it existed. This concept was embodied by NASA into its formal Exobiology Program and into the philosophy of the program both before and after the Viking missions that were launched to Mars to search for signs of life in 1975. Due to both management flexibility and an acceptance of the interdisciplinary nature of the problem of "life in the universe," NASA program managers, and particularly Richard S Young who ran the Exobiology Program beginning 1967, have made some excellent investments in paradigm altering science of great use both on Earth and on future space missions. The work of Carl Woese is one such example, which has revolutionized our understanding of the microbial world and the relationships of all life on Earth.


Assuntos
Exobiologia/organização & administração , Origem da Vida , Disciplinas das Ciências Biológicas , Meio Ambiente Extraterreno , Marte , Estados Unidos , United States National Aeronautics and Space Administration
17.
Orig Life Evol Biosph ; 36(5-6): 567-76, 2006 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17171428

RESUMO

The search for traces of past and present life is a complex and multidisciplinary research activity involving several scientific heritages and a specific industrial ability for planetary exploration. Laben was established in 1958 to design and manufacture electronic instruments for research in nuclear physics. In the mid 2004 the company was merged with Alenia Spazio. It is now part of Alcatel Alenia Space, a French Italian joint venture. Alcatel Alenia Space Italia SpA is a Finmeccanica Company. Currently the plant of Vimodrone provides a wide heritage in life science oriented to space application. The experience in Space Life Science is consolidated in the following research areas: (1) Physiology: Mouse models related to studies on human physiology Human neuroscience research and dosimetry (2) Animal Adaptation and Behaviour: mice behaviour related to stabling stress (3) Developmental Biology: aquatic microorganisms cultivation (4) Cell culture & Biotechnology: Protein crystal growth General purpose Multiwell Next Biotechnology studies and development: Bio reactor, mainly oriented to tissue engineering Microsensor for tissue control (organ replacement) Multiwell for adherent cell culture or for automated biosensor based on cell culture Experiment Container for organic systems Experiment Container for small animals Instrumentation based on fluorescent Biosensors Sensors for Life science experiments for Biopan capsule and Space Vehicle Ray Shielding Materials Random Positioning Machine specialisation (Support ground equipment) The biological features of this heritage is at disposal for the exobiology multi science. The involvement of industries, from the beginning of the exobiology projects, allows a cost effective technologies closed loop development between Research Centres, Principal Investigators and industry.


Assuntos
Disciplinas das Ciências Biológicas/organização & administração , Exobiologia/organização & administração , Animais , Disciplinas das Ciências Biológicas/tendências , Pesquisa Biomédica/organização & administração , Pesquisa Biomédica/tendências , Biotecnologia/organização & administração , Biotecnologia/tendências , Exobiologia/tendências , França , Humanos , Cooperação Internacional , Itália , Camundongos , Modelos Animais , Objetivos Organizacionais
18.
Protoplasma ; 229(2-4): 95-100, 2006 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17180489

RESUMO

Gravity plays an important role for the evolution, orientation and development of organisms. Most of us, however, tend to overlook its importance because--due to its constant presence from the beginning of evolution some 4 billion years ago--this environmental parameter is almost hardwired into our interpretation of reality. This negligence of gravity is the more surprising as we all have our strong fights with this factor, especially during the very early and again during the late phases of our lives. On the other hand, scientists have been fascinated to observe the effects of gravity especially on plants and microorganisms for more than a hundred years, since Darwin and Sachs demonstrated the role of the root cap for downward growing plants. Different experimental approaches are nowadays available in order to change the influence of gravity and to study the corresponding influences on the physiology of biological systems. With the advent of spaceflight, a long-term nearly nullification of gravity is possible. Utilisation of this so-called "microgravity" condition for research in life sciences thus became an important asset in the space programs of various space agencies around the world. The German Space Life Sciences Program is managed--like all other space programs and activities in Germany--by the German Aerospace Center (DLR) in its role as space agency for Germany. Within the current space program, approved by the German government in May 2001, the overall goal for its life sciences part was defined as to gain scientific knowledge and to disclose new application potential by research under space conditions, especially by utilising the microgravity environment of the International Space Station. Three main scientific fields have been identified in collaboration with the scientific community: integrative human physiology, biotechnological applications of the microgravity environment, and fundamental biology of gravity and radiation responses (i.e., gravitational and radiation biology). In the present contribution, specific goals as well as achievements and perspectives of research in gravitational biology are given. In addition, some information is provided on spaceflight opportunities available.


Assuntos
Disciplinas das Ciências Biológicas/organização & administração , Pesquisa Biomédica/organização & administração , Órgãos Governamentais/organização & administração , Gravitação , Desenvolvimento de Programas , Voo Espacial/organização & administração , Animais , Disciplinas das Ciências Biológicas/tendências , Pesquisa Biomédica/tendências , Exobiologia/organização & administração , Fungos/fisiologia , Alemanha , Gravitropismo , Sensação Gravitacional , História do Século XX , História do Século XXI , Humanos , Agências Internacionais/organização & administração , Mecanotransdução Celular , Fenômenos Fisiológicos Vegetais , Voo Espacial/história , Voo Espacial/tendências , Ausência de Peso
20.
Astrobiology ; 3(3): 463-70, 2003.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14678657

RESUMO

The NASA Astrobiology Institute (NAI) was established as a means to advance the field of astrobiology by providing a multidisciplinary, multi-institution, science-directed program, executed by universities, research institutes, and NASA and other government laboratories. The scientific community and NASA defined the science content at several workshops as summarized in the NASA Astrobiology Roadmap. Teams were chosen nationwide, following the recommendations of external review groups, and the research program began in 1998. There are now 16 national Teams and five international affiliated and associated astrobiology institutions. The NAI has attracted an outstanding group of scientific groups and individuals. The Institute facilitates the involvement of the scientists in its scientific and management vision. Its goal is to support basic research and allow the scientists the freedom to select their projects and alter them as indicated by new research. Additional missions include the education of the public, the involvement of students who will be the astrobiologists of future generations, and the development of a culture of collaboration in NAI, a "virtual institute," spread across many sites nationally and internationally.


Assuntos
Exobiologia/história , Exobiologia/organização & administração , United States National Aeronautics and Space Administration/história , United States National Aeronautics and Space Administration/organização & administração , História do Século XX , História do Século XXI , Publicações Periódicas como Assunto , Estados Unidos
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