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Community Report from the Biosignatures Standards of Evidence Workshop

Authors :
Meadows, Victoria
Graham, Heather
Abrahamsson, Victor
Adam, Zach
Amador-French, Elena
Arney, Giada
Barge, Laurie
Barlow, Erica
Berea, Anamaria
Bose, Maitrayee
Bower, Dina
Chan, Marjorie
Cleaves, Jim
Corpolongo, Andrea
Currie, Miles
Domagal-Goldman, Shawn
Dong, Chuanfei
Eigenbrode, Jennifer
Enright, Allison
Fauchez, Thomas J.
Fisk, Martin
Fricke, Matthew
Fujii, Yuka
Gangidine, Andrew
Gezer, Eftal
Glavin, Daniel
Grenfell, Lee
Harman, Sonny
Hatzenpichler, Roland
Hausrath, Libby
Henderson, Bryana
Johnson, Sarah Stewart
Jones, Andrea
Hamilton, Trinity
Hickman-Lewis, Keyron
Jahnke, Linda
Kacar, Betul
Kopparapu, Ravi
Kempes, Christopher
Kish, Adrienne
Krissansen-Totton, Joshua
Leavitt, Wil
Komatsu, Yu
Lichtenberg, Tim
Lindsay, Melody
Maggiori, Catherine
Marais, David Des
Mathis, Cole
Morono, Yuki
Neveu, Marc
Ni, Grace
Nixon, Conor
Olson, Stephanie
Parenteau, Niki
Perl, Scott
Quinn, Richard
Raj, Chinmayee
Rodriguez, Laura
Rutter, Lindsay
Sandora, McCullen
Schmidt, Britney
Schwieterman, Eddie
Segura, Antigona
Sekerci, Fatih
Seyler, Lauren
Smith, Harrison
Soares, Georgia
Som, Sanjoy
Suzuki, Shino
Teece, Bonnie
Weber, Jessica
Wolfe-Simon, Felisa
Wong, Michael
Yano, Hajime
Young, Liza
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

The search for life beyond the Earth is the overarching goal of the NASA Astrobiology Program, and it underpins the science of missions that explore the environments of Solar System planets and exoplanets. However, the detection of extraterrestrial life, in our Solar System and beyond, is sufficiently challenging that it is likely that multiple measurements and approaches, spanning disciplines and missions, will be needed to make a convincing claim. Life detection will therefore not be an instantaneous process, and it is unlikely to be unambiguous-yet it is a high-stakes scientific achievement that will garner an enormous amount of public interest. Current and upcoming research efforts and missions aimed at detecting past and extant life could be supported by a consensus framework to plan for, assess and discuss life detection claims (c.f. Green et al., 2021). Such a framework could help increase the robustness of biosignature detection and interpretation, and improve communication with the scientific community and the public. In response to this need, and the call to the community to develop a confidence scale for standards of evidence for biosignature detection (Green et al., 2021), a community-organized workshop was held on July 19-22, 2021. The meeting was designed in a fully virtual (flipped) format. Preparatory materials including readings, instructional videos and activities were made available prior to the workshop, allowing the workshop schedule to be fully dedicated to active community discussion and prompted writing sessions. To maximize global interaction, the discussion components of the workshop were held during business hours in three different time zones, Asia/Pacific, European and US, with daily information hand-off between group organizers.<br />Comment: 86 pages, 14 figures, workshop report

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2210.14293
Document Type :
Working Paper