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The Search for life in the UniverseDr Louisa Preston (Open University)(Venue: Royal Astronomical Society Lecture Theatre) This event is fully booked because tickets were reallocated to those that had booked in December. If you have booked tickets but are now unable to attend please advise us so that your ticket may be issued to someone on the reserve list. Thank you. The search for life in the Universe is one of humanity's last great adventures and
we are closer than ever to sending humans to Mars, and other planets and moons
in the cosmos, to seek this life out. What are the chances of finding life on
Mars, Europa, or Titan and what might it look like? Astrobiologists are trying
to figure out where other forms of life might be hiding, how we can find it,
and what it might be able to tell us about ourselves and where we came from.
This talk will steer you through the search for life in the Universe and
explain how we use 'extreme' forms of life on Earth to guide us. We will then
discuss the chances of finding intelligent life elsewhere in the Universe, the
search for habitable planets in other distant solar systems, and the future for
our exploration, and ultimately colonisation, of the cosmos. Louisa is an Astrobiologist, Planetary Geologist and TED Fellow who spends her time thinking up ways to find life on Mars, and how humanity might one day colonise other planets and moons. She works in environments across the Earth where life is able to survive our planet's most extreme conditions as analogues for possible extra-terrestrial life forms and habitats. Louisa is also a popular science writer and communicator, currently working on her first book "Goldilocks and the Water Bears: The Search for life in the Universe" for Bloomsbury Sigma. You can follow her on Twitter @LouisaJPreston and through her blog at www.louisajpreston.com. Booking is required for the evening lecture. We will be taking bookings from31st October, please email events@ras.org.uk to reserve a place after that date.
Website: www.ras.org.uk
we are closer than ever to sending humans to Mars, and other planets and moons
in the cosmos, to seek this life out. What are the chances of finding life on
Mars, Europa, or Titan and what might it look like? Astrobiologists are trying
to figure out where other forms of life might be hiding, how we can find it,
and what it might be able to tell us about ourselves and where we came from.
This talk will steer you through the search for life in the Universe and
explain how we use 'extreme' forms of life on Earth to guide us. We will then
discuss the chances of finding intelligent life elsewhere in the Universe, the
search for habitable planets in other distant solar systems, and the future for
our exploration, and ultimately colonisation, of the cosmos. Louisa is an Astrobiologist, Planetary Geologist and TED Fellow who spends her time thinking up ways to find life on Mars, and how humanity might one day colonise other planets and moons. She works in environments across the Earth where life is able to survive our planet's most extreme conditions as analogues for possible extra-terrestrial life forms and habitats. Louisa is also a popular science writer and communicator, currently working on her first book "Goldilocks and the Water Bears: The Search for life in the Universe" for Bloomsbury Sigma. You can follow her on Twitter @LouisaJPreston and through her blog at www.louisajpreston.com. Booking is required for the evening lecture. We will be taking bookings from31st October, please email events@ras.org.uk to reserve a place after that date.
Website: www.ras.org.uk