Center for Advanced Studies (CAS) Research Focus Stardust

Center for Advanced Studies (CAS) Research Focus Stardust
Podcast Description
A fundamental and fascinating discovery of modern astrophysics consists in the fact that the chemical elements from which the earth and life are built were produced in the cores of massive stars. At the end of their development, these stars explode as so-called supernovae and charge elementary components of future planets as well as life into the surrounding interstellar gas, where new stars and planets can then built up from this material. There is no doubt anymore: Everything is based on stardust.
The formation of stardust in galaxies like our milky way is an everyday process. This, combined with the discovery of thousands of planetary systems surrounding other stars, many of them so-called habitable zones, makes it very likely that life exists elsewhere in the universe.
Our Earth and our solar system came into being 4.5 billion years ago. After another 5 billion years at the latest, our sun will explode and our solar system and thus probably also mankind will be destroyed. Astronomical observations show that each year somewhere in our milky way a number of stars and planetary systems (perhaps with life on them) cease to exist. In the meantime, however, every year several new stars and planetary systems emerge in other places in the milky way, and thus probably also new life. Humanity is part of this cosmical come-and-go.
What are the consequences of these insights of modern astronomy for our view of the world and our notion of man's place in the space? How does this change man`s relationship to the earth? How do these findings affect the image of Earth and Space? Which cultural, ethical, and social consequences would the discovery of life in space have? The CAS Research Focus "Stardust" brings together scientists from a wide range of disciplines to discuss these questions.
Podcast Insights
Content Themes
The content primarily examines the origins of chemical elements from supernovae, the search for extraterrestrial life in habitable zones, and discusses evolutionary transitions in life, with episodes including analyses of exoplanets, implications of stardust for human existence, and ethical considerations of potential life beyond Earth.

A fundamental and fascinating discovery of modern astrophysics consists in the fact that the chemical elements from which the earth and life are built were produced in the cores of massive stars. At the end of their development, these stars explode as so-called supernovae and charge elementary components of future planets as well as life into the surrounding interstellar gas, where new stars and planets can then built up from this material. There is no doubt anymore: Everything is based on stardust.
The formation of stardust in galaxies like our milky way is an everyday process. This, combined with the discovery of thousands of planetary systems surrounding other stars, many of them so-called habitable zones, makes it very likely that life exists elsewhere in the universe.
Our Earth and our solar system came into being 4.5 billion years ago. After another 5 billion years at the latest, our sun will explode and our solar system and thus probably also mankind will be destroyed. Astronomical observations show that each year somewhere in our milky way a number of stars and planetary systems (perhaps with life on them) cease to exist. In the meantime, however, every year several new stars and planetary systems emerge in other places in the milky way, and thus probably also new life. Humanity is part of this cosmical come-and-go.
What are the consequences of these insights of modern astronomy for our view of the world and our notion of man’s place in the space? How does this change man`s relationship to the earth? How do these findings affect the image of Earth and Space? Which cultural, ethical, and social consequences would the discovery of life in space have? The CAS Research Focus “Stardust” brings together scientists from a wide range of disciplines to discuss these questions.
Die Astrophysik erlebt gerade einen bemerkenswerten Forschungsboom. Immer konkretere Forschungen und präzisere Weltraumteleskope lassen fremde Welten greifbarer werden und geben Wissenschaftlern Anlass, die Entdeckung außerirdischen Lebens zu avisieren. In der Vortragsreihe sind Wissenschaftlerinnen und Wissenschaftler aus ganz unterschiedlichen Disziplinen eingeladen, die Konsequenzen dieser neuen Erkenntnisse zu reflektieren und die dabei die Frage zu erörtern, inwiefern der tiefere Blick ins All auch die Modelle von Welt und Umwelt verändert.
Die Vortragsreihe ist Teil des von Andreas Burkert geleiteten CAS-Schwerpunktes “Stardust”. Im Rahmen des Schwerpunktes diskutiert eine Gruppe von LMU-Wissenschaftlern die Auswirkungen, die die Erkenntnisse der modernen Astronomie auf unser Weltbild und unsere Vorstellung über die Stellung des Menschen im All haben. | Sibylle Anderl ist promovierte Astrophysikerin und Redakteurin der Frankfurter Allgemeinen Zeitung. Ihr vielbeachtetes Buch “Das Universum und ich” erschien 2017.

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