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  • A Small Payloads Program for Astrobiology

    Paper number

    IAC-08.A1.6.3

    Author

    Dr. John D. Rummel, East Carolina University, United States

    Coauthor

    Prof. Pascale Ehrenfreund, University of Leiden, The Netherlands

    Year

    2008

    Abstract
    Astrobiology is the study of the origin, evolution, distribution, and future of life in the universe.  As a meta-discipline, astrobiology is inherently interdisciplinary, embracing activities from a widely diverse set, including the search for potentially inhabited planets beyond our Solar System, the exploration of Mars and the outer planets, laboratory and field investigations of the origin and early evolution of life, and studies of the potential of life to adapt to challenging environments on Earth and in space.  A variety of spaceflight  opportunities are essential in addressing these questions in ways not possible on Earth. In addition to the larger planetary exploration and astronomy projects, there is a need for missions that can provide low-cost, regular access to the unique characteristics of space, including non-unitary gravity levels, the full-spectrum space radiation environment, hard vacuum, and the environments found on other planetary surfaces.
    
    With the release of the Stand-Alone Mission of Opportunity Notice Announcement of Opportunity (SALMON AO), NASA’s Science Mission Directorate is establishing an Astrobiology Small Payloads (ASP) Program to enable the conduct of spaceflight experiments and observations to use the space environment as a laboratory in ways not practicable using larger spacecraft or the currently planned planetary or astronomical platforms.  Based on the evaluation of concepts from a June 2007 workshop, astrobiology science that could be accomplished using small satellites and related flight opportunities span astrobiology’s component disciplines, including investigations in the fields of exobiology, astrochemistry, planetary sciences, and astrophysics.  This paper describes the nature of the program currently envisioned, and recent progress toward providing space-access for astrobiology investigations.
    
    Abstract document

    IAC-08.A1.6.3.pdf

    Manuscript document

    IAC-08.A1.6.3.pdf (🔒 authorized access only).

    To get the manuscript, please contact IAF Secretariat.