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The Astrobiology of the Anthropocene

Authors :
Haqq-Misra, Jacob
Som, Sanjoy
Mullan, Brendan
Loureiro, Rafael
Schwieterman, Edward
Seyler, Lauren
Mogosanu, Haritina
Frank, Adam
Wolf, Eric
Forgan, Duncan
Cockell, Charles
Sullivan, Woodruff
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Human influence on the biosphere has been evident at least since the development of widespread agriculture, and some stratigraphers have suggested that the activities of modern civilization indicate a geological epoch transition. The study of the anthropocene as a geological epoch, and its implication for the future of energy-intensive civilizations, is an emerging transdisciplinary field in which astrobiology can play a leading role. Habitability research of Earth, Mars, and exoplanets examines extreme cases relevant for understanding climate change as a planetary process. Energy-intensive civilizations will also face thermodynamic limits to growth, which provides an important constraint for estimating the longevity of human civilization and guiding the search for extraterrestrial intelligence. We recommend that missions concepts such as LUVOIR, HabEx, and OST be pursued in order to make significant progress toward understanding the future evolution of life on our planet and the possible evolution of technological, energy-intensive life elsewhere in the universe.<br />Comment: A white paper on "Astrobiology Science Strategy" submitted to the NAS

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1801.00052
Document Type :
Working Paper