| Founder | Juan Pérez-Mercader |
|---|---|
| Established | 19 November 1999 |
| Mission | Astrobiology research |
| Focus | Origin of life |
| Director | Víctor Parro García |
| Owner | INTA-CSIC |
| Location | , |
| Website | cab |
Spanish Astrobiology Center (Spanish:Centro de Astrobiología (CAB)) is a state-run institute inSpain dedicated toastrobiology research, and it is part of theNational Institute of Aerospace Technology (INTA) as well as theSpanish National Research Council (CSIC).[1] It was created in 1999 and it is affiliated withNASA Astrobiology Institute.
Its main objective is "understanding life as a consequence of the evolution of the matter and energy in the Universe."[2]
The foundation of Spain's Astrobiology Center (CAB) had its beginnings in 1998 when a group of Spanish scientists led byJuan Pérez-Mercader, presented a proposal of affiliation to the newly createdNASA Astrobiology Institute (NAI).[3] The affiliation was accepted and the center was officially created on 19 November 1999. It operated from offices at theNational Institute of Aerospace Technology (INTA) until it moved to its own building inaugurated in January 2003.
The Astrobiology Center is based inMadrid, Spain, its director isVíctor Parro García, and the Vicedirector isFrancisco Najarro. The center is organized into several research and support units, and some of these are associated to Spanish universities, including theUniversity of Valladolid and theAutonomous University of Madrid. The center is part of theNational Institute of Aerospace Technology (INTA) as well as theSpanish National Research Council (CSIC).[1]
The center is structured in several departments:[4][5] Astrophysics Department, Molecular Evolution Department, Planetary Science and Habitability Department, Advanced Instrumentations Department, as well as several support units.
CAB has contributed to NASA in its mission to better characterize and find conditions for life in the Universe, and has prioritized Martian weather research and endurance of someextremophile microorganisms.[3] CAB has developed instruments for multiple missions: