Q&AALAMY,GETTYIMAGESX4,DEEPSEAPHOTOGRAPHYILLUSTRATIONS:DANBRIGHTTHE HUBBLE
TELESCOPE AND
CORNWALL?
WHAT CONNECTS
- The Hubble Space Telescope was used
 to detect the largest electrically-charged
 molecule found so far in the interstellar
 medium of deep space. The molecules
 form hollow spheres, called ‘buckyballs’.
- They are named a er the American
 futurist and architect Robert
 Buckminster Fuller. In the 1940s he
 popularised the use of geodesic domes.
 These are enclosed structures, made up
 of triangular elements.
- Geodesic domes are lightweight,
 strong, and enclose a large volume,
 making them the ideal design for the two
 huge greenhouses at Cornwall’s iconic
 Eden Project, built in 2000.
- Buckyballs are a form of carbon, like
 diamond or graphite. Properly known as
 buckminsterfullerene, the molecule
 consists of 60 carbon atoms bonded
 together into a shape that resembles a
SAMUEL MURPHY, NOTTINGHAMWHAT PROPELS THE ‘SAILING STONES’ ACROSS THE CALIFORNIAN DESERT?
Reports of rocks apparently moving across dry lakebeds in Death Valley, California, have been
circulating for over a century. With some ‘sailing stones’ weighing over 300kg and leaving trails
hundreds of metres long, scientists have long struggled to find a plausible explanation. That
changed in 2014, when researchers led by Richard Norris at Scripps Institution of Oceanography
showed that during the winter, rain turns to ice on the lakebeds, which then cracks during the
daytime, forming large panels. These sometimes catch the wind, li  up and start moving – shoving
even large boulders ahead of them across the so  mud. But conditions must be just right: if the ice
is too thick, it doesn’t break into panels; too thin, and it can’t shove the rocks. RMANDREW CIREL, CORSHAMCOULD WE GENETICALLY MODIFY AN ANIMAL
SO THAT IT COULD LIVE UNAIDED ON
ANOTHER PLANET OR MOON?
There may already be microbes on Earth that
could survive on Mars. Bacteria from the
Dead Sea and the Arctic tundra have been
shown to survive in a simulated Martian
atmosphere. Venus would be trickier, even in
its cooler upper atmosphere, because this
planet has no ice or water. Alien life might
have its own completely di erent
biochemistry, but we couldn’t genetically
engineer it, because DNA molecules
themselves require water.
For more complex, multicellular life, the
lack of atmospheric oxygen on Mars would
probably rule out this planet. Earthorganisms that don’t need oxygen are
almost all single-celled because anaerobic
metabolisms produce much less energy. But
Jupiter’s moon Europa has a liquid water
ocean underneath its icy crust, and in 2009,
researchers at the University of Arizona
suggested that there might be oxygen too.
How survivable this ocean is for Earth life
will depend on what other toxins and
nutrients are dissolved in it. Deep-sea fish
and invertebrates would be good
colonisation candidates, though, and genetic
engineering might be useful to give them
improved cold and pressure resistance. LVDeep-sea
invertebrates, like
this sea cucumber,
could be good
candidates to live on
Jupiter’s moon EuropaQ&AALAMY, GETTY IMAGES X4, DEEP SEA PHOTOGRAPHY ILLUSTRATIONS: DAN BRIGHT
THE HUBBLE
TELESCOPE AND
CORNWALL?
WHAT CONNECTS
- The Hubble Space Telescope was used
 to detect the largest electrically-charged
 molecule found so far in the interstellar
 medium of deep space. The molecules
 form hollow spheres, called ‘buckyballs’.
- They are named a er the American
 futurist and architect Robert
 Buckminster Fuller. In the 1940s he
 popularised the use of geodesic domes.
 These are enclosed structures, made up
 of triangular elements.
- Geodesic domes are lightweight,
 strong, and enclose a large volume,
 making them the ideal design for the two
 huge greenhouses at Cornwall’s iconic
 Eden Project, built in 2000.
- Buckyballs are a form of carbon, like
 diamond or graphite. Properly known as
 buckminsterfullerene, the molecule
 consists of 60 carbon atoms bonded
 together into a shape that resembles a
SAMUEL MURPHY, NOTTINGHAMWHAT PROPELS THE ‘SAILING STONES’ ACROSS THE CALIFORNIAN DESERT?
Reports of rocks apparently moving across dry lakebeds in Death Valley, California, have been
circulating for over a century. With some ‘sailing stones’ weighing over 300kg and leaving trails
hundreds of metres long, scientists have long struggled to find a plausible explanation. That
changed in 2014, when researchers led by Richard Norris at Scripps Institution of Oceanography
showed that during the winter, rain turns to ice on the lakebeds, which then cracks during the
daytime, forming large panels. These sometimes catch the wind, li  up and start moving – shoving
even large boulders ahead of them across the so  mud. But conditions must be just right: if the ice
is too thick, it doesn’t break into panels; too thin, and it can’t shove the rocks. RMCOULD WE GENETICALLY MODIFY AN ANIMAL
SO THAT IT COULD LIVE UNAIDED ON
ANOTHER PLANET OR MOON?
There may already be microbes on Earth that
could survive on Mars. Bacteria from the
Dead Sea and the Arctic tundra have been
shown to survive in a simulated Martian
atmosphere. Venus would be trickier, even in
its cooler upper atmosphere, because this
planet has no ice or water. Alien life might
have its own completely di erent
biochemistry, but we couldn’t genetically
engineer it, because DNA molecules
themselves require water.
For more complex, multicellular life, the
lack of atmospheric oxygen on Mars would
probably rule out this planet. Earthorganisms that don’t need oxygen are
almost all single-celled because anaerobic
metabolisms produce much less energy. But
Jupiter’s moon Europa has a liquid water
ocean underneath its icy crust, and in 2009,
researchers at the University of Arizona
suggested that there might be oxygen too.
How survivable this ocean is for Earth life
will depend on what other toxins and
nutrients are dissolved in it. Deep-sea fish
and invertebrates would be good
colonisation candidates, though, and genetic
engineering might be useful to give them
improved cold and pressure resistance. LVDeep-sea
invertebrates, like
this sea cucumber,
could be good
candidates to live on
Jupiter’s moon Europa