ST. LOUIS - An astronomer involved in a NASA mission to look for Earthlike planets beyond our solar system has winnowed through thousands of stars to come up with a top-10 list that includes some of the favorite haunts for science-fiction aliens.
Actually, the lineup from Margaret Turnbull at the Carnegie Institute of Washington is broken down into two top-five lists: one for the radio-based search for extraterrestrial intelligence, or SETI, and the other for the NASA mission, known as the Terrestrial Planet Finder.
The SETI stars will be on the list of targets for the privately funded Allen Telescope Array in California, which is due to begin limited operation with 42 linked radio dishes this spring. But the top prospects for the Terrestrial Planet Finder are currently in limbo, because NASA has put the mission on indefinite hold.
"It's all but shelved at this point ... pretty much all the research we've talked about is in peril," Turnbull said Saturday during a news briefing on astrobiology, conducted in St. Louis at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.
Jill Tarter of the California-based SETI Institute said NASA's budget proposal, released this month, would cut funding for astrobiology research by 50 percent. She and the other astronomers at Saturday's session called on Congress to restore funding.
Tarter and her colleagues were particularly concerned about the fate of the Terrestrial Planet Finder, or TPF, and a precursor planet-hunting mission called SIM PlanetQuest. This month's budget proposal would delay SIM's launch until 2015 at the earliest. TPF, which had been set for launch around 2016, has been deferred indefinitely.
"We are facing an increasingly difficult financial threat," Tarter said. Although NASA's official view is that research is being deferred rather than canceled, she said "we are all finite in our lives and our careers. ... Significant delay is in fact cancellation."
Crowd-pleasing corner
Although the search for other Earths and other civilizations is a small and highly speculative corner of astronomical research, it's also arguably the most crowd-pleasing corner. Tarter herself served as the model for the main character in the late astronomer Carl Sagan's best-selling novel "Contact," which was made into a movie starring Jodie Foster. If astrobiologists had a nickel for every time aliens cropped up in popular culture ... well, they wouldn't need to depend on NASA funding.
Turnbull's list serves as a device for targeting the search as well as focusing the imagination. She started out with a database of 19,000 stars surrounded by "habitable zones" where life could conceivably survive. Then she zeroed in on stable stars that were at least 3 billion years old, with masses no more than 1.5 times that of our own sun.
The stars also had to have at least 50 percent of the sun's iron content, because astronomers believe that stellar systems need a minimum of heavy elements in order for planets to form.