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Future NASA plans for exobiology and solar system explorationThe prominence of exobiology as a part of the NASA program in solar system exploration reached its peak during the Viking missions of the mid-1970's. Even before those missions were finished, the Exobiology Program had been transferred out of the Division responsible for solar system exploration, and many of the direct ties to future missions became more difficult to make, providing a bureaucratic impediment to the conduct of exobiology research in space. Early in 1993, the Exobiology Program was brought back in to the Solar System Exploration Division, as an integral part of NASA's program to study this and other solar systems. As such, the Program stands to gain from an overall broad investment in missions that will study Mars, small bodies such as asteroids and comets, and outer planetary bodies such as Saturn, Titan, and even Pluto. Additional opportunities may be forthcoming on the Moon and elsewhere in Earth-orbit. Ground-based studies will continue to be an important foundation for work in space, while additional effects will be continue to use ground-based astronomical instruments to study other planetary systems, and to search for life on planets around other stars. This paper provides a current planning and budgetary prospectus on the future of Exobiology in NASA.
Document ID
19950032301
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
Authors
Rummel, John D.
(NASA Headquarters Washington, DC United States)
Meyer, Michael A.
(LESC, Washington, DC US, United States)
Date Acquired
August 16, 2013
Publication Date
June 1, 1994
Publication Information
Publication: Origins of Life and Evolution of the Biosphere
Volume: 24
Issue: 2-4
ISSN: 0169-6149
Subject Category
Space Biology
Accession Number
95A63900
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other

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