Publications by authors named "Diana Gentry"

The 2-week, virtual Future of the Search for Life science and engineering workshop brought together more than 100 scientists, engineers, and technologists in March and April 2022 to provide their expert opinion on the interconnections between life-detection science and technology. Participants identified the advances in measurement and sampling technologies they believed to be necessary to perform searches for life elsewhere in our Solar System, 20 years or more in the future. Among suggested measurements for these searches, those pertaining to three potential indicators of life termed "dynamic disequilibrium," "catalysis," and "informational polymers" were identified as particularly promising avenues for further exploration.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • The BioSentinel mission aims to understand the biological risks of deep space radiation by studying the effects on budding yeast cells, marking the first biological research in this area in 50 years.
  • Research reveals that exposure to low-dose space-like radiation results in a dose-dependent decrease in yeast growth and metabolism, especially in yeast strains lacking DNA repair capabilities.
  • Findings from this study will assist in creating better biosensors and technologies for upcoming deep space exploration missions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We present a case for the exploration of Venus as an astrobiology target-(1) investigations focused on the likelihood that liquid water existed on the surface in the past, leading to the potential for the origin and evolution of life, (2) investigations into the potential for habitable zones within Venus' present-day clouds and Venus-like exo atmospheres, (3) theoretical investigations into how active aerobiology may impact the radiative energy balance of Venus' clouds and Venus-like atmospheres, and (4) application of these investigative approaches toward better understanding the atmospheric dynamics and habitability of exoplanets. The proximity of Venus to Earth, guidance for exoplanet habitability investigations, and access to the potential cloud habitable layer and surface for prolonged extended measurements together make the planet a very attractive target for near term astrobiological exploration.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Small satellite technologies like CubeSats are revolutionizing space research, particularly in the field of biology and astrobiology.
  • Over the past 15 years, NASA Ames Research Center has launched several biological CubeSats to study how space conditions affect microorganisms, focusing on factors like radiation and microgravity.
  • The latest CubeSat, BioSentinel, aims to be the first to operate in deep space and will conduct experiments on DNA damage repair in cells, utilizing new advancements in its biosensing payload for long-term studies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In light of future missions beyond low Earth orbit (LEO) and the potential establishment of bases on the Moon and Mars, the effects of the deep space environment on biology need to be examined in order to develop protective countermeasures. Although many biological experiments have been performed in space since the 1960s, most have occurred in LEO and for only short periods of time. These LEO missions have studied many biological phenomena in a variety of model organisms, and have utilized a broad range of technologies.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Ancient Venus and Earth may have been similar in crucial ways for the development of life, such as liquid water oceans, land-ocean interfaces, favorable chemical ingredients, and energy pathways. If life ever developed on, or was transported to, early Venus from elsewhere, it might have thrived, expanded, and then survived the changes that have led to an inhospitable surface on Venus today. The Venus cloud layer may provide a refugium for extant life that persisted from an earlier more habitable surface environment.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We conducted an analog sampling expedition under simulated mission constraints to areas dominated by basaltic tephra of the Eldfell and Fimmvörðuháls lava fields (Iceland). Sites were selected to be "homogeneous" at a coarse remote sensing resolution (10-100 m) in apparent color, morphology, moisture, and grain size, with best-effort realism in numbers of locations and replicates. Three different biomarker assays (counting of nucleic-acid-stained cells via fluorescent microscopy, a luciferin/luciferase assay for adenosine triphosphate, and quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) to detect DNA associated with bacteria, archaea, and fungi) were characterized at four nested spatial scales (1 m, 10 m, 100 m, and >1 km) by using five common metrics for sample site representativeness (sample mean variance, group F tests, pairwise t tests, and the distribution-free rank sum H and u tests).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • A heritage-based flyby mission to Io is proposed to investigate its volcanic activity and internal structure, addressing recommendations from the 2011 Decadal Surveys.
  • The mission will utilize a suite of scientific instruments, including imaging, magnetic field sensors, and a dust analyzer, powered by Advanced Stirling Radioisotope Generators.
  • It plans for 10 close flybys with low altitudes, using gravity assists from Venus and Earth to reach Jupiter in 6 years, while incorporating radiation-tolerant components to manage risks.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF