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Bioastronomy : The Search for Extraterrestrial Life — The Exploration Broadens / edited by Jean Heidmann, Michael J. Klein.

Lecture Notes in Physics 1969-2012 Archive Available online

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Format:
Book
Conference/Event
Author/Creator:
International Symposium on Bioastronomy, Corporate Author.
Contributor:
Heidmann, Jean, editor.
Klein, Michael J., 1940 January 19-2005, editor.
Conference Name:
International Symposium on Bioastronomy
Series:
Lecture Notes in Physics, 1616-6361 ; 390
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Solar system.
Geophysics.
Space Physics.
Local Subjects:
Space Physics.
Geophysics.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (XVII, 413 p. 30 illus.)
Edition:
1st ed. 1991.
Place of Publication:
Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg : Imprint: Springer, 1991.
Language Note:
English
Summary:
This book collects together a selection of the best papers presented at the Third International Bioastronomy Symposium held in 1990. The subject is bioastronomy, the search for life in the universe, andthe book is devided according to the five main stages of life as recognized by this new branch of science: cosmic organic, prebiotic, primitive biological, and advanced. Thereader will find here the most recent results obtained by top specialists from all over the world on hot topics such as the formation and discovery of planets, organic chemistry in meteorites and comets, prebiotic chemistry in the atmosphere of Titan, the search for primitive life in the permafrost of Mars, and, SETI itself, the search for extraterrestrial intelligence. Complemented by live discussions each presentation forms a review of the state-of-the-art treatment of a particular area and also looks toward those developments in bioastronomywhich will surely be realized in the next few years.
Contents:
Opening remarks
The creation of free energy
Particulate disks around main sequence stars
Bursts of star formation in the local galactic disk and their implications for the origin and evolution of life around the sun and nearby stars
Testing theories of star formation
Towards an estimate of the fration of stars with planets from velocities of high precision
On the feasibility of extra-solar planetary detection at very low ratio frequencies
The ESO microvariability Key Program and the detection of extrasolar planets and brown dwarfs
A proposal for the search of extrasolar planets by occultation
Near-term prospects for extra-solar planet detection: The astrometric imaging telescope
A search for T-Tauri stars based on the IRAS Point Source Catalog
How many single stars among solar-type stars?
Habitable planetary orbits around ? centauri and other binaries
The search for protostars
The habitability of Mars-like planets around main sequence stars
Planetary accretion debris and IR excesses in open stellar clusters
Lithium abundances as a probe of the early evolution of solar-type stars
Low-amplitude stellar velocity variations: Other possibilities
Some recent developments in interstellar chemistry
The formation of long chains of carbon atoms in space
Hydrogen cyanide polymerization: A preferred cosmochemical pathway
PAHs: Very abundant organic molecules in the interstellar medium
Primitive evolution: Early information transfer and catalysis by purines
The search for H2O in extraterrestrial environments
Self-assembly properties of primitive organic compounds
Cometary studies: Bioastronomical perspectives
Origin of the biosphere of the earth
Carbon-rich micrometeorites and prebiotic synthesis
Titan's atmosphere probed bystellar occultation
Study of transmitted light through Titans atmosphere
UV radiation fields in dense clouds: Photochemical effects
Prebiotic chemistry in planetary environments
Terrestrial accretion of prebiotic volatiles and organic molecules during the heavy bombardment
Geophysiology and habitable zones around sun-like stars
Exobiological habitats: An overview
Habitable zones for earth-like planets around main sequence stars
Titan's atmosphere from voyager infrared observations: Parallels and differences with the primitive earth
Liquid water and life on early mars
New interpretation of crustal extension evidences on mars
Martian paleohydrology and its implications for exobiology science
Boundaries of the earth's biosphere
The impact of technology on SETI
RFI surveys at selected radio observatories
A 1 Hz resolution RFI survey: Preliminary results
The SERENDIP II SETI project: Observations and RFI analysis
SETI: On the telescope and on the drawing board
Project of ETI signal search at the wavelength 1.47 mm
A SETI search technique: Monitor stars to which we have sent signals
Radio search for alien space probes
Karhunen-Loève versus Fourier transform for SETI
On the strategy of SETI
Pan-Galactic puise periods and the pulse window for SETI
Cosmic background radiation limits for SETI
VLBI and interstellar scattering tests for SETI signals
A test for the interstellar contact channel hypothesis in SETI
The SETI program of the Planetary Society
Trying to do science using high spectral resolution SETI prototypes
The summit of the CBR at mm wavelengths and other queries
The potential contribution of the northern cross radiotelescope to the SETI program
A proposal for a SETI global network
A search for Dysonspheres around late-type stars in the Iras catalog
Gravitational, plasma, and black-hole lenses for interstellar communications
SETI through the gamma-ray window: A search for interstellar spacecraft
Criteria of artificiality in SETI
The antecedents of consciousness: Evolving the “intelligent” ability to simulate situations and contemplate the consequences of novel courses of action
Cognition in an African Grey parrot
Archaeology in space: Encountering Alien Trash and other remains
Biological constraints on interstellar travel
A philosophical approach to the extraterrestrial life issue
The intrinsic limit to the speed of innovation and its relevance for the question “where are they?”
SETI searches with the 70m SUFFA radio telescope
Strategy of the mutual search for civilizations by means of probes
Connections: Life on Earth and atoms in the Universe
From the physical world to the biological universe: Historical developments underlying SETI
A possible way for evolution of the intellect of intelligent beings
SETI as a science
May there be an ultimate goal to the cosmic evolution?
Evolutionary approach to the SETI problem
Peace among the factions: Cooling tempers in the extraterrestrial life debate
The likely organizational order of advanced intelligences
The role of comprehensive perception in tradition
Technical evolution and positive feedback
Contact paranoia and pronoia: An anthropologist looks at SETI
The declaration of principles for activities following the detection of extraterrestrial intelligence
The consequences of contact: Views of the scientific community and the science media
Selection criteria in bioastronomy: Excerpts from a panel discussion
Summary of scientific content of the symposium.
Notes:
Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN:
3-540-46447-6

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