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published by the NASA Johnson Space Center: Astromaterials Research Office
This is the web site for NASA's Astromaterials Research Office (ARES), which is responsible for conducting fundamental research on meteorites, cosmic dust, solar wind, lunar rocks, and orbital debris. Goals of the research include building understanding of the origin and composition of the solar system, plus searching for indicators of primitive biological activity through the study of astrobiology.

Users will find information about current and past research, links to published articles, activities and lessons for K-12 classrooms. Also highlighted are web sites relating to the Mars Soil Genesis Project, hypervelocity impact technology, orbital debris, and planetary evolution.
Subjects Levels Resource Types
Astronomy
- Astronomy Education
- Exoplanets
= Astrobiology
= Detection Methods
- Fundamentals
= Matter
- Instrumentation
= Detectors
- Solar System
= Asteroids
= Comets
- Space Exploration
- High School
- Middle School
- Informal Education
- Instructional Material
- Reference Material
= Research study
- Dataset
- Audio/Visual
= Image/Image Set
Intended Users Formats Ratings
- Educators
- Learners
- Researchers
- General Publics
- text/html
- application/pdf
- image/jpeg
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Access Rights:
Free access
Restriction:
Does not have a copyright, license, or other use restriction.
Use and reproduction of NASA images, video, and audio materials is permitted for educational or informational purposes, provided NASA is acknowledged as the source.
Keywords:
ARES, NASA research, astronomy research, cosmic debris, extraterrestrial life, meteor impact, meteor research, meteoroids, research facility
Record Creator:
Metadata instance created March 9, 2010 by Caroline Hall
Record Updated:
August 11, 2016 by Lyle Barbato
Last Update
when Cataloged:
May 25, 2008
Other Collections:

ComPADRE is beta testing Citation Styles!

Record Link
AIP Format
(NASA Johnson Space Center: Astromaterials Research Office, Houston, 2001), WWW Document, (https://ares.jsc.nasa.gov/).
AJP/PRST-PER
ARES: Astromaterials Research and Exploration Science (NASA Johnson Space Center: Astromaterials Research Office, Houston, 2001), <https://ares.jsc.nasa.gov/>.
APA Format
ARES: Astromaterials Research and Exploration Science. (2008, May 25). Retrieved April 23, 2024, from NASA Johnson Space Center: Astromaterials Research Office: https://ares.jsc.nasa.gov/
Chicago Format
NASA Johnson Space Center: Astromaterials Research Office. ARES: Astromaterials Research and Exploration Science. Houston: NASA Johnson Space Center: Astromaterials Research Office, May 25, 2008. https://ares.jsc.nasa.gov/ (accessed 23 April 2024).
MLA Format
ARES: Astromaterials Research and Exploration Science. Houston: NASA Johnson Space Center: Astromaterials Research Office, 2001. 25 May 2008. 23 Apr. 2024 <https://ares.jsc.nasa.gov/>.
BibTeX Export Format
@misc{ Title = {ARES: Astromaterials Research and Exploration Science}, Publisher = {NASA Johnson Space Center: Astromaterials Research Office}, Volume = {2024}, Number = {23 April 2024}, Month = {May 25, 2008}, Year = {2001} }
Refer Export Format

%T ARES: Astromaterials Research and Exploration Science %D May 25, 2008 %I NASA Johnson Space Center: Astromaterials Research Office %C Houston %U https://ares.jsc.nasa.gov/ %O text/html

EndNote Export Format

%0 Electronic Source %D May 25, 2008 %T ARES: Astromaterials Research and Exploration Science %I NASA Johnson Space Center: Astromaterials Research Office %V 2024 %N 23 April 2024 %8 May 25, 2008 %9 text/html %U https://ares.jsc.nasa.gov/


Disclaimer: ComPADRE offers citation styles as a guide only. We cannot offer interpretations about citations as this is an automated procedure. Please refer to the style manuals in the Citation Source Information area for clarifications.

Citation Source Information

The AIP Style presented is based on information from the AIP Style Manual.

The APA Style presented is based on information from APA Style.org: Electronic References.

The Chicago Style presented is based on information from Examples of Chicago-Style Documentation.

The MLA Style presented is based on information from the MLA FAQ.

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