Finding Life by Looking for Complexity

Finding Life by Looking for Complexity

University of Glasgow chemist Lee Cronin and his collaborators have developed a new way to detect life. Their "assembly theory" could give us a reliable method for recognizing life or evidence of past life based on the complexity of molecules in any environment. The Planetary Society’s Rae Paoletta shares our favorite images of Saturn’s rings with Mat. Bruce Betts reveals which star takes up more of Earth’s night sky as he resolves another What’s Up space quiz. Discover more at https://www.planetary.org/planetary-radio/lee-cronin-assembly-theory

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Episoder(1317)

5,000 worlds and counting: the success of TESS

5,000 worlds and counting: the success of TESS

Michelle Kunimoto was one of Forbes magazine’s 30 Under 30 in science. Now she leads the most successful search for exoplanets that relies on data delivered by the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellit...

2 Mar 202248min

Astrobiologist David Grinspoon on life, the universe and everything

Astrobiologist David Grinspoon on life, the universe and everything

Astrobiologist, planetary scientist, author and science communicator David Grinspoon has just been named a lifetime fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. He returns to Pla...

23 Feb 20221h 4min

Saving the world one telescope at a time: The Shoemaker NEO grant winne

Saving the world one telescope at a time: The Shoemaker NEO grant winne

The Planetary Society has awarded another eight Gene Shoemaker near-Earth object grants to outstanding amateur astronomers and observatories around the world. We’ll meet recipients from Chile, Croatia...

16 Feb 202256min

The weather on brown dwarfs, and worlds on the eve of destruction

The weather on brown dwarfs, and worlds on the eve of destruction

Astrophysicists Sam Grunblatt and Johanna Vos are colleagues at the American Museum of Natural History in New York. Sam’s team has discovered giant worlds that are about to be devoured by their expand...

9 Feb 202251min

Space Policy Edition: JWST and the politics of mega-science (with Robert Smith)

Space Policy Edition: JWST and the politics of mega-science (with Robert Smith)

Robert Smith shares the story of how the astronomical community decided upon the JWST as the follow-up to the Hubble Space Telescope, the coalition politics required for mega-projects like Hubble and ...

4 Feb 20221h 20min

Nobel laureate John Mather: The promise of the James Webb Space Telescope

Nobel laureate John Mather: The promise of the James Webb Space Telescope

The JWST’s instruments have been turned on. Now begins the months-long preparation for observations that will reveal our universe as never before. 2006 Nobel Prize for Physics laureate John Mather is ...

2 Feb 20221h 3min

Worlds of snow and ice

Worlds of snow and ice

From Venus to Pluto, our solar system contains a myriad of planets, moons and other bodies whose surfaces are covered in snow and ice made of water and other exotic stuff. Saturn’s moon Enceladus is a...

26 Jan 202250min

Curiosity rolls on: Mars Science Laboratory project scientist Ashwin Vasavada

Curiosity rolls on: Mars Science Laboratory project scientist Ashwin Vasavada

We are approaching the 10th anniversary of Curiosity’s arrival in the Red Planet’s Gale crater. The rolling laboratory is still making profound discoveries as it reveals beautiful vistas and closeups....

19 Jan 202251min

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