How do you hunt for extraterrestrial life? You visit other planets, you find new planets, you study our own planet, or you listen. All four methods came together last night at the World Science Festival when four speakers took part in a conversation called, simply, "The Search for Life in the Universe." When you put four lively scientists with four different ways of thinking on a stage together, consensus isn't the first thing to emerge. But the panel could agree on one thing: If you yearn to know whether we're alone in the universe, it's a hell of a time to be alive. 1. MarsSteve Squyres of Cornell University is one of the project leads on the Mars rovers, those endurance robots Spirit and Opportunity that continue sending back Martian data. Spirit may be stuck, but in this week's edition of the journal Science, Squyres' team has published a new ...
World Science Festival: The 4 Ways to Find E.T.
Explore the Search for Life in the Universe, from Mars rovers to exoplanet hunting and beyond. Are we alone? Discover more.
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