Extraterrestrial (TV program)
Hypothetical examples of a planet and a moon supporting extraterrestrial life / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Extraterrestrial (also Alien Worlds in the UK) is a British-American two-part television documentary miniseries, aired in 2005 in the UK by Channel 4, by the National Geographic Channel (as Extraterrestrial) in the US on Monday, May 30, 2005[1] and produced by Big Wave Productions Ltd. The program focuses on the hypothetical and scientifically feasible evolution of alien life on extrasolar planets, providing model examples of two different fictional worlds, one in each of the series's two episodes.[2][3]
This television-related article needs additional citations for verification. (October 2011) |
Extraterrestrial | |
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Genre | Astrobiology documentary |
Directed by | Nick Stringer |
Presented by | Armand Leroi (UK) |
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Composer | The Fratelli Brothers |
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Original language | English |
No. of series | 1 |
No. of episodes | 2 |
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Executive producer | Sarah Cunliffe |
Producer | Nick Stringer |
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Production company | Big Wave Productions Ltd. |
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The documentary is based on speculative collaboration of a group of American and British scientists, who were collectively commissioned by National Geographic. For the purposes of the documentary, the team of scientists divides two hypothetical examples of realistic worlds on which extraterrestrial life could evolve: A tidally locked planet (dubbed "Aurelia") orbiting a red dwarf star and a large moon (dubbed "Blue Moon") orbiting a gas giant in a binary star system. The scientific team of the series used a combination of accretion theory, climatology, and xenobiology to imagine the most likely locations for extraterrestrial life and most probable evolutionary path such life would take.[4]
The "Aurelia" and "Blue Moon" concepts seen in the series were also featured in the touring exhibition The Science of Aliens.