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Space Museum launches new sky show "In Search of Cosmic Life" (with photos)
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     The Hong Kong Space Museum's newly produced sky show, "In Search of Cosmic Life", which examines the possibility of extraterrestrial life, will be launched tomorrow (February 1).

     The show begins with a nature-lover named Selena and her elder brother Sunny, who meet SPM-1, a mysterious robot who seems to know everything about life science, during a field trip to the countryside. Through their interaction the show takes audiences on a trip to the celestial bodies on which scientists have found liquid water or organic compounds. Liquid water is essential to life as it is the essential medium for most biochemical reactions, while the occurrence of organic compounds in space may hint that life could exist elsewhere than Earth.
 
     "In Search of Cosmic Life" also introduces audiences to the contributions made by robots in exploring potentially habitable places and discovering organic substances in the universe, as well as related space missions such as Stardust, Kepler and OSIRIS-REx. Scientists will also share their views on whether extraterrestrial life might be found.
 
     The 30-minute show will be screened until October 31 at the museum's Stanley Ho Space Theatre. It will be screened daily at 3.50pm and 7.20pm. An additional show at 12.20pm will be screened on Saturdays, Sundays and public holidays.

     Tickets priced at $24 (front stalls) and $32 (stalls) are available at the Hong Kong Space Museum Box Office and URBTIX (www.urbtix.hk). The museum is closed on Tuesdays (except public holidays).
 
     For detailed information, please visit hk.space.museum or call 2721 0226.
 
Ends/Wednesday, January 31, 2018
Issued at HKT 16:05
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The Hong Kong Space Museum's newly produced sky show, "In Search of Cosmic Life", which examines the possibility of extraterrestrial life, will be launched tomorrow (February 1). Film still shows deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA), which is the genetic material in living organisms. If the entire DNA in a single human cell was stretched out and placed end to end, it would be approximately two metres long.
The Hong Kong Space Museum's newly produced sky show, "In Search of Cosmic Life", which examines the possibility of extraterrestrial life, will be launched tomorrow (February 1). Oceans exist beneath the icy surfaces of the moons of some planetary giants of the Solar System. It is estimated that the subsurface ocean of Jupiter's moon Europa (pictured) is almost 100 kilometres deep, holding more water than all of Earth's oceans combined.
The Hong Kong Space Museum's newly produced sky show, "In Search of Cosmic Life", which examines the possibility of extraterrestrial life, will be launched tomorrow (February 1). Film still shows amino acids - the building blocks of proteins - which are essential to life since muscles, hormones and enzymes are made of proteins. The spacecraft Stardust discovered the simplest amino acid yet, known as Glycine, which was found on the comet Wild-2.