Carl Sagan once imagined creatures floating through Jupiter’s clouds. Back then, it was just an idea. Now, scientists have taken the first real step toward testing that vision.

A team at Cornell University’s Carl Sagan Institute has discovered that microorganisms in Earth’s upper atmosphere carry colorful, light-protective pigments.

Those pigments – tiny shields made of molecules like carotenoids and flavins – reflect light in recognizable ways. The reflections might be strong enough for future telescopes to detect on distant planets.

For the first time, scientists have measured how these airborne microbes scatter and absorb light. The results …

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