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Searching for life

MIT astrophysicist Sara Seager seeks life on planets outside our solar system.
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Portrait headshot of Sara Seager
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Sara Seager is searching for life beyond the solar system — and says the world is ready.
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Photo: Len Rubenstein

"I call it ‘the awakening.’ The whole world is waking up to the fact that we’re getting close to finding other Earths and signs of life," says Sara Seager, an MIT astrophysicist who is working to find life on planets outside our solar system. "It will change the way we see our place in the universe."

Every star in the sky is a sun. “And if our sun has planets, we expect that other stars will have planets too, and they do,” explains Seager, the Class of 1941 Professor of Physics and Planetary Science and winner of a 2013 MacArthur “genius” award. In fact, such exoplanets are common. More than 2,000 have been discovered since 1995, and there are probably many more.

“Statistically we think each of the approximately 100 billion stars in the Milky Way has at least one planet,” Seager says. Of those, as many as one in five stars like the sun has a rocky, Earth-sized planet that could have the right surface temperatures for life.

Those are the exoplanets sought by Seager, who was recruited by MIT to build its exoplanet program. But it’s a challenge. “Other Earths are so small and dim compared to the star they’re right beside,” she says. Our own sun, for example, is ten billion times brighter than Earth.

Although a few Earth-sized candidates have already been found, current telescopes are not powerful enough to tell us if they harbor life. Many projects are in the works, however, to change that — and each will get us closer to that goal, Seager says.

Seager is working on three of these projects. One, dubbed ExoplanetSat, involves a space-based fleet of 50 to 100 rectangular telescopes roughly the size of a milk carton. Each ExoplanetSat project — the first could launch in a year — will be pointed at an individual star with the goal of detecting any planet that passes in front of the star during its orbit. The changes in brightness associated with such a transit can be analyzed to determine, among other things, the planet’s density. ExoplanetSat was first developed by Seager at MIT and is now a collaboration with Draper Lab and the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory.

The light from a transiting planet can also give insights into its atmosphere — something Seager predicted that led to the first-ever discovery of an exoplanet atmosphere. Another part of her work is searching for the atmospheric gases that could indicate life. Seager notes that although her research is focused on the detection of an Earth twin, it has other applications. “Some of the technology developed for ExoplanetSat is being adapted for long-distance laser communication and also Earth-imaging applications. Basic research inspires fundamental discoveries on which applications flourish," she says.

Seager is excited about the future. “We stand on a great threshold in the human history of space exploration,” she told Congress last December. "If life is prevalent in our neighborhood of the galaxy, it is within our resources and technological reach to be the first generation in human history to finally cross this threshold, and to learn if there is life of any kind beyond Earth.”

Press Mentions

CBC News

CBC News reporter Michael MacDonald spotlights the work of Prof. Sara Seager, who he calls a “certified rock star” in her field, describing everything from her interest in astronomy as a young child to her current search for exoplanets and alien life. McDonald writes that, “ultimately, her research could help answer some of the biggest questions facing humankind.”

Chronicle of Higher Education

Prof. Sara Seager speaks with Robin Wilson of The Chronicle of Higher Education for a piece about what it’s like to be a female astronomer. Seager explains that MIT is one of few places where she isn’t treated differently because she’s female. "I don’t think about my gender while I’m here,” she says. 

New Scientist

Prof. Sara Seager and her team are building a list of biosignatures - chemicals that could suggest the presence of life on other planets - in their search for extraterrestrial life, writes Joshua Sokol for New Scientist. Seager is “looking at all small molecules, not just the ones linked to life as we know it.”

The Wall Street Journal

In an article for The Wall Street Journal, Prof. Sara Seager imagines what space exploration and the search for extraterrestrial life will be like in 2045. Seager writes that, “Data has been flooding in from the nation’s latest space telescope, one with a 30-meter-diameter mirror (the Hubble’s, for comparison, was 2.4 meters).”

New York Times

Professor Sara Seager describes her favorite photo taken by the Hubble Space Telescope, which shows newborn stars surrounded by raw planetary materials, in an article for The New York Times. “This image is my favorite because even more astonishing than the beauty is the implication,” writes Seager. 

New York Times

Prof. Sara Seager speaks with New York Times reporter Dennis Overbye about the search for Earth-like planets. “We can count as many as we like,” Seager explains, “but until we can observe the atmospheres and assess their greenhouse gas power, we don’t really know what the surface temperatures are like."

The Wall Street Journal

The Wall Street Journal interviews Professor Sara Seager about her research and her search for extraterrestrial life. "We haven't been able to find the true Earth twin yet because it's so very hard to find. It's like finding the proverbial needle in a haystack," says Seager. 

The Guardian

In an interview with The Guardian, Professor Sara Seager speaks about the search for extra-terrestrial life. "Our own galaxy has 100bn stars and our universe has upwards of 100bn galaxies – making the chance for life elsewhere seem inevitable based on sheer probability," explains Seager.

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