Motivated
by recent discoveries of a multitude of extrasolar planets, NASA has initiated
a series of studies for space-based observatories that will be able to search
for life on these worlds. To optimize designs of these NASA missions and to interpret
the data returned, we need to be able to recognize habitable worlds and to discriminate
between planets with and without life. Jet Propulsion Laboratory Team 2 (JPL 2)
research supports these endeavors. Principal Research
Goals of the JPL Team 2 Understand the plausible
range of atmospheric and surface compositions for terrestrial planets Learn
how to recognize the presence of life on extrasolar planets by identifying signatures
of life in their spectra
To achieve these goals,
we work to develop a suite of innovative modeling tools to simulate the environments
and spectra of extrasolar planets. These modeling tools constitute a Virtual Planetary
Laboratory, used to explore the plausible range of atmospheric compositions and
globally-averaged spectra for early Earth, other planets in our solar system,
and for extrasolar planets both with and without life. These tools will provide
the first models to couple the radiative fluxes, climate, chemistry,
geology and biology of a terrestrial planet, all to produce a self-consistent
planetary state.
Research Tasks of the JPL Team 2
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Task
1: Use a radiative-transfer model to explore sensitivity to life and planetary characteristics in disk-averaged spectra of terrestrial planets.
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Task 2: Couple the radiative and climate models together and validate this combined model using products generated in Task 1.
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Task 3: Integrate an atmospheric chemistry model with the climate-radiative
transfer model developed in Task 2, and use this combined model to explore
plausible extrasolar environments, and the environments of Earth through the
past 4.3 billion years.
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Task 4: Define and develop geological and exospheric modules for terrestrial
planets, and integrate them with the combined climate-chemistry of Task 3.
This model (The Abiotic Planet Model) will be used to further explore the
plausible range of extrasolar planet environments, and search for "false
positives" i.e. planets without life that may display some of the
characteristics expected of an inhabited planet.
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Task 5: Define and develop biological modules and integrate them with the
Abiotic Planet Model developed in Task 4. This combined model, the Inhabited
Planet Model, will be used to explore the interactions of life with the
environment of an inhabited planet, and to define the signatures of life on the
surface and in the atmosphere of a planet."
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Components of the Virtual Planetary Lab
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Results of this research will provide an
improved understanding of the range of atmospheric compositions that are possible
for planets with and without life. It will also help to quantify the effect of
life on the atmospheric spectrum and composition of a planet. The models will
provide a comprehensive spectral catalog, a "menu" of biosignatures,
which will be used to determine the optimum wavelength range, spectral resolution,
and sensitivity required to remotely sense the signs of life in the atmosphere
or on the surface of another world. Having a spectral catalog of biosignatures
will specifically address the question of false positive detections of life.
These
studies will provide recommendations for the design and optimization of search
strategies for future NASA planet detecting and characterizing missions such as
TPF (Terrestrial Planet Finder, to be launched in 2011) and Life Finder (the next
generation follow-on mission).
See Team Research Plan |