Kasting worked as a postdoctoral fellow at the National Center for Atmospheric Research and at NASAAmes Research Center before accepting a position with the space science division at NASA Ames. He has served NASA in various capacities, including co-chairing the scientific working group for the Terrestrial Planet Finder. Kasting joined Penn State University in 1988, but continues to collaborate with NASA.[1][6]
He is interested in atmospheric evolution, planetary atmospheres and paleoclimates.[5] Kasting writes about the geophysical history and status of the Earth, with a focus on atmospherics. He was well known among the geologists for his ground breaking idea on the only long term negative feedback for the atmospheric carbon dioxides: the carbon silica cycle. Together with his PhD student Alex Pavlov, they put a decisive mark on the post-GOE (Great Oxidation Event) oxygen level of greater than 1E-5 Present Atmospheric Level.
According to Kasting's calculations, the Earth's oceans will evaporate in about a billion years, while the Sun is still a main sequence star. This date is much earlier than previously thought.[7] He has also considered the habitability criteria of other stellar systems and planets. A 1993 paper on habitable zones was particularly decisive in shaping thinking on this field.[8]
Kasting has published two books, The Earth System,[9] and How to Find a Habitable Planet,[10] along with more than 140 publications in research journals.[2] In their popular 2001 work Rare Earth:Why Complex Life is Uncommon in the Universe, Peter Ward and Donald Brownlee note: "Although many scientists have been doggedly pursuing the various attributes necessary for a habitable planet...one name stands out in the scientific literature: James Kasting."[11]: 266
“Even if we search the cosmos and come up with a negative result, if we see a bunch of Earth-like planets and none of them have life, we’ll know we hold a very special place in the universe,” Kasting said. “But I was a fan of Carl Sagan growing up, and Sagan was much more optimistic than that. And I’m more optimistic also.”[16]
Awards
He won a LExEN Award for his work "Collaborative Research: Methanogenesis and the Climate of Early Mars".[17] He won the Oparin Medal, presented by the International Society for the Study of the Origin of Life, in 2008.[18]