NASA invests nearly $7 million in an effort, led by biology professor Sarah Johnson, aimed at developing a new kind of extraterrestrial life detection system that could be used on Mars.
Georgetown’s Sarah Johnson’s interdisciplinary project – the Laboratory for Agnostic Biosignatures – will use the grant over the next five years to develop the new life detection system for use on planetary missions from Mars’ subsurface to the farthest reaches of our solar system.
“Time and time again, we’ve been bowled over by the indescribable foreignness of other worlds,” says Johnson, assistant professor of biology at Georgetown and the project’s principal investigator. “Our goal is to go beyond what we currently understand and devise ways to find forms of life we can scarcely imagine.”