Astrobiology and the Search for Extraterrestrial Life
Astrobiology and the Search for Extraterrestrial Life (University of Edinburgh). Instructor: Professor Charles Cockell. Over two thousand years ago, the ancient Greeks wondered if other worlds were
habitable. In the coming years this question will be experimentally tested. This course is an introduction to astrobiology. It explores the origin and evolution of life on the Earth and its potential to
exist elsewhere.
Astrobiology addresses compelling questions of wide interest such as: How did life originate on the Earth? Is this an inevitable process and is life common across the Universe? Astrobiology is an interdisciplinary
science that bridges fields as diverse as astrophysics, biology, geosciences and chemistry. In this course we will explore what we know about life's ability to live in extreme environments on the Earth,
we will look at different hypotheses for how it originated. We will look at some of the missions to search for life in our own Solar System and on planets orbiting distant stars. We will discuss some of the extreme
environments on the Earth that help us understand the limits of life and how life has adapted to cope with extremes. We will explore the possibility of intelligent alien life and some of the implications of its detection.
(from astrobiology.ac.uk)
Lecture 1.6 - The Structure of Life: Cells |
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