Workshop on Life Detection Technology: For Mars, Enceladus and Beyond


The ELSI/EON will hold an international workshop on October 5-6, 2017

Venue: ELSI Hall in ELSI-1 building, Tokyo Institute of Technology, Tokyo, Japan

October 5 : registration starts at 8:45am,  session starts at 9:15am

 

ELSI Conveners: 

Chaitanya Giri – EON Research Fellow

Jim Cleaves – EON Director

Tomohiro Usui – Associate Principal Investigator

Tony Jia –  Research Scientist

Yuka Fujii –  Project Associate Professor

Keiko Hamano –  Research Scientist

Hidenori Genda – Associate Principal Investigator

Tomohiro Mochizuki –  Research Scientist

 

Premise of the Workshop:

The trans-disciplinary field of astrobiology ambitions to determine whether life exists beyond Earth. This astrobiological quest is extremely crucial for comprehending the intricate processes occurring on the early Earth that led to the origin of carbon-based life. Organic and potentially prebiotic molecules have been identified on numerous Solar System objects. But, none of these identified molecules, nor the identifying instruments can as yet determine the presence of life.

 

The Earth Life Science Institute (ELSI) is a hub bridging experimental and theoretical approaches to astrobiology and origin of life. The objective of this ELSI workshop is to deliberate on the advances, demands, and strategies for constructing and operating applicable ‘life detection’ technologies to be used on Mars, Enceladus, and other potentially habitable objects, which are targeted for exploration in the first-half of the 21st century.

 

 

 

 

 

 


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