Chapter Review

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Vocabulary

bio-marker Drake Equation extremophile
habitable zone natural selection  

Review Questions

  1. Which stars have large habitable zones and which ones have small habitable zones?
  2. Why should the search for life be narrowed to stars with masses 0.5 to 1.4 solar masses?
  3. What spectral types of stars are excluded from S.E.T.I.?
  4. What is the range of temperatures for stars included in S.E.T.I.?
  5. Why are binary or multiple star systems usually excluded from S.E.T.I. searches? Which type of binary system might be good ones to check out?
  6. What are the characteristics of life?
  7. What is the definition of life? How do you know if something is living?
  8. Where can life exist?
  9. How will we be able to detect if life exists on an exoplanet?
  10. Where in the Galaxy should the search be concentrated (bulge, stellar halo, disk, dark matter halo) and why?
  11. Where is extraterrestrial intelligent life expected to be found?
  12. How do we guess how many other communicating civilizations we expect to find? What parts of that guess are fairly well-known and what parts are much more uncertain?
  13. What do you find when you plug in values for the Drake Equation?

References and Web Links

  1. NASA Astrobiology Program. NASA's Astrobiology Program addresses three fundamental questions: How does life begin and evolve? Is there life beyond Earth and, if so, how can we detect it? What is the future of life on Earth and in the universe?
  2. Life in the Universe edited by John Billinham (MIT Press: Cambridge, MA, 1982). Topics covered:
  3. Scientific American October 1994 issue. Entire issue devoted to extraterrestrial life. Topics covered:
  4. Paul Patton, The Three Suns of Centaurus in Astronomy Magazine January 1982, pp. 6 - 17. He talks about the stars themselves and also about stable planet orbits. He then discusses life zones (``ecospheres''), possible types of intelligent life (very speculative!), and Project Daedalus and other starships.
  5. The Berkeley SERENDIP homepage discusses U.C. Berkeley's contribution to the SETI project (will display in another window).
  6. The SETI Institute's homepage. Will display in another window.
  7. My list of information about the detection of other planets.

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last updated: July 28, 2011

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Author of original content: Nick Strobel