Alien life may look nothing like life on Earth — so how should we go about looking for it?

Alien life might look unlike anything we've ever seen on Earth. Trying to find evidence of these unknown organisms will require some creativity.

An abstract illustration showing a silvery material branching off into many different paths
Evolution, the process of change, governs life on Earth − and potentially different forms of life in other places.
(Image credit: Just_Super/E+ via Getty Images)

We have only one example of biology forming in the universe — life on Earth. But what if life can form in other ways? How do you look for alien life when you don't know what alien life might look like?

These questions are preoccupying astrobiologists, who are scientists who look for life beyond Earth. Astrobiologists have attempted to come up with universal rules that govern the emergence of complex physical and biological systems both on Earth and beyond.

Chris Impey
University Distinguished Professor of Astronomy, University of Arizona

Chris Impey is a professor of Astronomy at the University of Arizona. He has over 180 refereed publications on observational cosmology, galaxies, and quasars, and his research has been supported by $20 million in NASA and NSF grants. Impey is a past vice president of the American Astronomical Society and he has been an NSF Distinguished Teaching Scholar, Carnegie Council’s Arizona Professor of the Year, and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute Professor. He’s written over 70 articles on cosmology and astrobiology, two introductory textbooks, a novel called Shadow World, and eight popular science books.