REBROADCAST: Nature PastCast - October 1993
Nature Podcast
podcast@nature.com
4.5 • 893 Ratings
🗓️ 14 October 2016
⏱️ 13 minutes
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Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | This podcast originally aired in 2013. |
| 0:04.3 | This is the Nature Pastcast, each month raiding Nature's archive and looking at key moments in science. |
| 0:10.3 | In this show, nature is concerned with finding extraterrestrial life. |
| 0:19.4 | Nature, Volume 365, 21 October, 1993. |
| 0:28.9 | So in October of 1993, so in October of 1993, Carl Sagan and several colleagues published a research article in nature |
| 0:39.5 | with really a remarkable discovery. |
| 0:42.3 | They found highly suggestive, perhaps conclusive evidence for having found life on a planet in the universe. |
| 1:09.9 | The Gannockett. The Galileo spacecraft found evidence of abundant gaseous oxygen, a widely distributed surface pigment, and atmospheric methane, an extreme thermodynamic disequilibrium. |
| 1:13.3 | Moreover, the presence of narrow band, pulsed, |
| 1:19.0 | amplitude-modulated radio transmission seems uniquely attributable to intelligence. |
| 1:26.6 | My name is David Kaiser. I teach physics and the history science at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. |
| 1:32.5 | Remarkably enough, in the 1990s, you could publish an article claiming you'd found life on Earth. |
| 1:36.1 | A search for life on Earth from the Galileo spacecraft. |
| 1:43.6 | Which was en route to Jupiter, but sort of fortuitously because of the particular orbital path that it would have to take to get there, |
| 1:45.0 | it had to sort of linger relatively close to the Earth. So it was in space and looking at its near neighbor |
| 1:50.2 | the planet Earth. So this is a quite classic paper that uses the Earth as a test case. Can you |
| 1:56.5 | detect life on the Earth? So they used a Galileo, spacecraft spun it round, pointed it back to the earth |
| 2:02.4 | and asked a very simple question, can we see any signatures of life? And of course they did. |
| 2:13.4 | I'm Charles Kekal and I'm an astrobiologist at the University of Edinburgh. |
| 2:18.0 | Now we're entering into a period of finding Earth-like planets around other stars. |
| 2:22.8 | It's obviously an area that should be of interest to biologists |
| 2:26.0 | about the implications of finding Earth-like planets and looking for life on them. |
... |
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