Challenge-Based Funding To Spark Origins Breakthroughs

editorAstrobiology14 hours ago3 Views

Challenge-Based Funding To Spark Origins Breakthroughs

Earth’s surface is shown as it might have looked some 3.8 billion years ago, perhaps when life was just beginning, in this artist’s rendering. Illustration: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Lizbeth B. De La Torre

Origins of life research is marred by ambiguous questions and goals, creating uncertainty about when research objectives have been achieved.

Because of numerous unknowns and disagreements about definitions and theories, the field lacks clear markers of progress. We argue that the origins community should focus on goals that have agreed-upon meaning and can be consensually categorized as achieved or unachieved.

The origins community needs these goals to maintain coherence amongst a federation of problems with the shared, but nebulous aspiration of understanding the origins of life. We propose a list of challenges with clear ‘Finish Lines’–explicit descriptions of what will be achieved if each goal is reached–similar to the X-prize model.

The intent is not to impose top-down research directions, but to compel the community to coalesce around explicit problems of the highest priority, as physics, astronomy, and planetary science communities do when setting science objectives for missions and megaprojects.

Even if the generated phenomena are not unequivocally life-like, demonstrating systems that achieve these goals will sharpen the distinction between life itself and the constellation of phenomena that co-occur with life.

This document was originally submitted as a whitepaper to the 2025 NASA-DARES (Decadal Astrobiology Research and Exploration Strategy) call for whitepapers (https://nspires.nasaprs.com/external/solicitations/summary.do?solId={4EC1A189-E5BF-88FE-4FEF-F7D1F448FE0D}&path=&method=init).

Cole Mathis, Harrison B. Smith

Comments: 5 pages
Subjects: Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics (astro-ph.IM); Earth and Planetary Astrophysics (astro-ph.EP)
Cite as: arXiv:2507.00106 [astro-ph.IM] (or arXiv:2507.00106v1 [astro-ph.IM] for this version)
https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2507.00106
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Submission history
From: Harrison Smith
[v1] Mon, 30 Jun 2025 16:58:10 UTC (215 KB)
https://arxiv.org/abs/2507.00106
Astrobiology,

Explorers Club Fellow, ex-NASA Space Station Payload manager/space biologist, Away Teams, Journalist, Lapsed climber, Synaesthete, Na’Vi-Jedi-Freman-Buddhist-mix, ASL, Devon Island and Everest Base Camp veteran, (he/him) 🖖🏻

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