The space agency has assembled a team of experts from across scientific fields at some of the nation's leading universities and research institutes to see if any of the more than 1,000 planets discovered outside our solar system may be habitable.
The initiative is called Nexus for Exoplanet System Science (NExSS), and it brings together earth scientists, planetary scientists, heliophysicists and astrophysicists.
The move comes just weeks after NASA's top scientist predicted that mankind will soon find indications of life outside of Earth.
The team will include scientists from 10 universities including Stanford, the University of California, Berkeley, Yale, Penn State and Arizona State as well as two research institutes and three organizations within NASA: the Goddard Institute for Space Studies, the Ames Research Center and the Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
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The excitement is palpable,” Steve Desch of ASU’s School of Earth and Space Exploration told the Arizona Daily Star. “We are really poised to answer the question of life elsewhere.”
Desch's team will study chemicals that have been detected on other worlds, such as oxygen and methane, to see if they were produced by biology, the Star reported.
“We really have to look for a chemical biosignature because we’re never going to be able to measure little green men running around on the surface of a planet,” ASU's Tom Zega told the newspaper.
A group of climatologists will use the light passing through the atmospheres of these exoplanets to see if they can find the conditions for harboring life.
The team from Yale University will design new spectrometers that could be used to examine the planets around nearby stars. In addition, they will work on a new interface for the Planet Hunters website, which will allow "citizen scientists" from around the world to search for planets using data from
NASA's Kepler spacecraft.
So far, citizen scientists have found more than 100 planets, including many that are within the habitable zones of their host stars, NASA said.
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