
The Thomistic Institute How Planetary Science Unifies the Search for Life Beyond Earth – Prof. Jonathan I. Lunine
Sep 25, 2025
In this discussion, Prof. Jonathan I. Lunine, Chief Scientist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory and a leading expert in planetary science, explores how various scientific fields converge in the search for extraterrestrial life. He highlights Mars, Europa, Enceladus, and Titan as prime candidates for harboring life, sharing insights from groundbreaking missions like Juno and Europa Clipper. Lunine emphasizes the importance of in-situ exploration and the promise of returning samples to Earth, envisioning a future where we could uncover signs of life within a couple of decades.
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Planetary Science As An Integrative Field
- Planetary science unifies geology, astronomy, chemistry, atmospheric science, and space physics to study planets as complex systems.
- Jonathan I. Lunine argues this integration became possible with space exploration and large telescopes.
Life Requires Information-Rich Chemistry
- Life uses highly specific, information-rich molecules unlike typical abiotic chemistry that makes diverse simple compounds.
- Lunine highlights an origin-of-life bottleneck that affects how likely life is to arise elsewhere.
Four Primary Targets For Life
- Lunine lists four promising targets for life in our solar system: Mars, Europa, Enceladus, and Titan.
- He frames Mars as historically central and the outer moons as newly prominent thanks to discoveries of subsurface or surface liquids.



