Abstract for Scott Sandford's astrobiology talk at Yale Nov. 14, 2000

This presentation will address the possibility that molecules created in the interstellar medium may play a role in the origin and evolution of life on planetary surfaces. The argument will be presented in three main parts. First, I will review the various organic and volatile compounds that are now known or suspected to exist in a variety of circumstellar and interstellar environments. This information is largely the result of combined applications of observational infrared and radio spectroscopy, laboratory astrophysical simulations, and theoretical astrochemistry. Second, I will devote additional attention to those materials that exhibit chemical properties that are of biological interest. Finally, I will discuss the evidence, largely gathered from the laboratory study of extraterrestrial materials (meteorites and cosmic dust), that interstellar materials, including organics, can survive the transition from the dense cloud phase into forming stellar systems. Once there, some of this material can be delivered largely unaltered to planetary surfaces where it can play key roles in the origin and subsequent evolution of life. Thus, the guiding principle of this presentation will be to attempt to 'put the astro into astrobiology.'

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