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What Recipes Produce a Habitable Planet by Staff Writers Houston TX (SPX) Sep 20, 2018
NASA's interdisciplinary Nexus for Exoplanet System Science (NExSS) project has awarded Rice University $7.7 million for a multidisciplinary, multi-institutional research program aimed at finding many different recipes nature might follow to produce rocky planets capable of supporting life. As any cook knows, it takes the right recipe and getting the right ingredients to make a tasty dish, and the same principle applies to habitable rocky planets, said Rice Earth and planetary scientist Rajdeep Dasgupta, the principal investigator on NASA NExSS's CLEVER Planets research program. "A recipe for life as we know it requires essential elements like carbon, oxygen, nitrogen, hydrogen, phosphorous and sulfur," said Dasgupta, professor of Earth, environmental and planetary sciences at Rice. "But the first billion years of a rocky planet's life are turbulent. On Earth, that period was marked by enormous change, not only at the surface but inside the planet as well. For planetary habitability, life-essential elements must survive that period in a bioavailable form." CLEVER Planets - short for "Cycles of Life-Essential Volatile Elements in Rocky Planets" - will explore what happens to life-essential elements in a rocky planet's formative years. It will involve experts from wide-ranging disciplines such as astrophysics, geology, geochemistry, geophysics, organic chemistry and atmospheric and climate science. The team includes 11 co-investigators from Rice, NASA's Johnson Space Center, UCLA, the University of California, Davis and the University of Colorado, Boulder. "We have the expertise to trace life-essential elements through the first billion-year journey from protoplanetary disks to prebiotic molecules on the surface of young worlds," Dasgupta said. "Some of the processes that are central to this - the ones happening inside the planet and the feedbacks that link interior processes with those on the surface - are largely unexplored in the context of exoplanets." He said the research will be guided by knowledge from the solar system's rocky planets - Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars - and other objects, but CLEVER Planets' goal is to extend knowledge to rocky worlds orbiting distant stars. "We know more about our own solar system than any other," Dasgupta said. "That's very useful for comparative planetology, but the focus of our search is beyond our own backyard. We want to construct and constrain as many possible pathways to rocky planet habitability as we can."
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