NASA convinced an American author we’ll find life on another planet — in next 25 years

Pulitzer Prize finalist Dave Eggers says scientists are ‘in striking distance’ of finding life on an exoplanet

Julia Musto
Thursday 19 September 2024 19:09
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NASA's Kepler space telescope capable of identifying other earths

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Pulitzer Prize finalist Dave Eggers says a trip to NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory convinced him we’ll find evidence of life on another planet within just 25 years — and it will likely be on an exoplanet.

Eggers, who visited the Southern California facility in June, credits future accomplishments expected with the 2027 launch of the Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope. The telescope will have a field of view at least 100 times larger than the Hubble Space Telescope, and the ability to block starlight to directly see exoplanets: planets outside of our solar system that orbit a star.

Eggers says this function, being able to block rays of a faraway star to see behind and around it, will be the key.

“To recap: For thousands of years, humans have wondered whether life is possible elsewhere in the universe, and now we’re within striking distance of being able to say not only yes, but here,” he wrote in a lengthy opinion piece published Tuesday in The Washington Post.

To date, astronomers have found and “confirmed” more than 5,000 exoplanets, out of the billions in our galaxy. But, there are thousands of others considered to be “candidates.”

Further observations are needed to know whether or not the exoplanets are real. The first exoplanets were discovered in the 1990s. Scientists are looking for exoplanets that might support light in the Goldilocks zone, in which planets are closer to a star.

Best-selling author David Eggers speaks to a crowd in Oakland, California, in 2018. Eggers, a Pulitzer Prize finalist, visited NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory this summer and scientists there convinced him: humans will find evidence of life on another planet within a quarter of a century.
Best-selling author David Eggers speaks to a crowd in Oakland, California, in 2018. Eggers, a Pulitzer Prize finalist, visited NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory this summer and scientists there convinced him: humans will find evidence of life on another planet within a quarter of a century. ((Michael Macor/San Francisco Chronicle via AP, File))

To help find them, they will use a tiny tool called a coronagraph: made of prisms, masks, and self-adjusting mirrors that are built to block glare. It’s a technology that’s been around since 1930 when French scientist Bernard Lyot first figured out how to block light from distant stars. Since then, the multi-layered coronagraph technology has been improving. There are coronagraphs on both the Hubble and James Webb Space Telescopes.

This new iteration will be more sensitive and adjustable than those and more capable, Eggers said. He visited the lab where many of them were made. More than 3,000 pistons will move the coronagraph’s mirrors.

NASA scientists use a crane to lift the top of a shipping container that the Nancy Roman Grace Space Telescope was stored in this past May. The telescope, slated to launch in just a few years, will help sceintists find exoplanets.
NASA scientists use a crane to lift the top of a shipping container that the Nancy Roman Grace Space Telescope was stored in this past May. The telescope, slated to launch in just a few years, will help sceintists find exoplanets. (NASA/JPL-Caltech)

But, Eggers was enraptured by something that won’t go up on the Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope. To describe it, he uses some variation of the word “beautiful” three times.

“It will be the most beautiful space object ever made by humans, involving gold foil and pulleys and origami, and will be bigger than a football field. It must happen,” Eggers said.

It’s known as “Starshade,” and is something he describes as “the direct competitor to the coronagraph.”

Starshade, a massive golden pinwheel, is a kind of monster coronagraph, with its pieces extending out nearly 200 feet. But, while the coronagraph is tested here on Earth, Starshade would separate from a telescope and unfurl itself for the first time in space.

A prototype of the Starshade’s inner disk is demonstrated at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in 2015. The Starshade is bigger than a football field, and could be a competitor to the coronagraph. It’s also “beautiful,” Dave Eggers said Tuesday.
A prototype of the Starshade’s inner disk is demonstrated at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in 2015. The Starshade is bigger than a football field, and could be a competitor to the coronagraph. It’s also “beautiful,” Dave Eggers said Tuesday. (NASA)

It would fly by the moon and speed through space for a few weeks, before lining up within just over three feet of the telescope’s line of sight. Then, its petals would unfold. Also unlike the coronagraph, which relies on the function of its parts, Starshade could be adjusted in space.

“It’s a work of gorgeous art and a ludicrous feat of ambition,” Eggers said.

Nick Siegler, the chief technologist for NASA’s exoplanet program, told him that Starshade was supposed to be in the movie “Ad Astra,” which was released in 2019. Producers later decided it was too complicated to explain.

Eggers said there’s still a chance that Starshade could go to space on the Habitable Worlds Observatory, which is scheduled to launch in the 2030s, aiding the continual search for life off Earth.

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