Scientists Study Trajectories of Life-Bearing Earth Meteorites 199
Hugh Pickens writes "About 65 million years ago, Earth was struck by an asteroid some 10 km in diameter with a mass of well over a trillion tonnes that created megatsunamis, global wildfires ignited by giant clouds of superheated ash, and the mass extinction of land-based life on Earth. Now astrobiologists have begun to study a less well known consequence: the ejection of billions of tons of life-bearing rocks and water into space that has made its way not just to other planets but other solar systems as well. Calculations by Tetsuya Hara and his colleagues at Kyoto Sangyo University in Japan show that a surprisingly large amount of life-bearing material ended up not on the Moon and Mars, as might be expected, but the Jovian moon Europa and the Saturnian moon Enceladus also received tons of life-bearing rock from earth. Even more amazingly, calculations suggest that most Earth ejecta ended up in interstellar space and some has probably already arrived at Earth-like exoplanets orbiting other stars. Hara estimates that about a thousand Earth-rocks from this event would have made the trip to Gliese 581, a red dwarf some 20 light years away that is thought to have a super-Earth orbiting at the edge of the habitable zone, taking about a million years to reach its destination. Of course, nobody knows if microbes can survive that kind of journey or even the shorter trips to Europa and Enceladus. But Hara says that if microbes can survive that kind of journey, they ought to flourish on a super-Earth in the habitable zone (PDF). 'If we consider the possibility that the fragmented ejecta (smaller than 1cm) are accreted to comets and other icy bodies, then buried fertile material could make the interstellar journey throughout the Galaxy,' writes Hara. 'Under these circumstances fragments could continue the interstellar journey and Earth origin meteorites could be transferred to Gl 581 system. If we take it as viable, we should consider the panspermia theories more seriously.'"
Panspermia (Score:5, Insightful)
If we take it is viable, we should consider the panspermia theories more seriously.
Only as a possible answer to the origin of Earth's life. It still doesn't answer the origin of life itself, wherever it may have started.
Re:Panspermia (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Panspermia (Score:2)
When you throw a dice, your first throw may be a six. Why are you trying to do statistics with a single event?
Bert
Re:Panspermia (Score:3)
When you throw a dice, your first throw may be a six. Why are you trying to do statistics with a single event?
"God does not play dice with the universe."
Re:Panspermia (Score:5, Interesting)
If you change the masses downwards to what they should be, then the chance of them getting through an atmosphere without breaking/burning up and denaturing all its alleged payload become minuscule.
Re:Panspermia (Score:3)
I still follow the premise that Life originated on earth. As a random chemical reaction, that created simple DNA strains that that happened in an area where the environment stayed constant enough for those chemical reactions to persist but changing enough to allow the strain to change over time. The Chemical Reaction that didn't break down allowed for more chemicals to connect to the DNA strand and multiply.
Re:Panspermia (Score:4, Insightful)
God? (Ducks!)
I still follow the premise that Life originated on earth. As a random chemical reaction, that created simple DNA strains that that happened in an area where the environment stayed constant enough for those chemical reactions to persist but changing enough to allow the strain to change over time. The Chemical Reaction that didn't break down allowed for more chemicals to connect to the DNA strand and multiply.
While thinking about it, the environment would not necessarily need to change to force the DNA to change (evolve). All the "environment" needs is to be stable enough to foster replication. The edges of such an area would provide the change in conditions needed for evolution to take hold. The bonds that were able to multiply at the edges and beyond did so. Those that were not able to didn't.
An example would be ocean vents. This environment is rather stable and fosters life within it. Along the edges, where the conditions are not as favorable to the original life forms, most those that are venturing out will die. Those that don't die continue to reproduce, each surviving generation better able to survive further away from the vents until the need for the vents completely disappears.
Just my $0.02 and I'm not a biologist. But I have stayed in a Holiday Inn and the concepts are not that hard to grasp.
Re:Panspermia (Score:4, Insightful)
From what I've read (which was a LONG time ago so further discoveries and theories may have developed), Earth had little or no oxygen when life developed, and the oxygen would have been a poisonous byproduct, like methane is to today's life.
So life itself would have changed the environment, of course along with other such variables as volcanos, continental drifting, and meteors.
Re:Panspermia (Score:2)
All the "environment" needs is to be stable enough to foster replication.
Its the bit between "dumb chemicals" and "things actually replicating" where we're a bit wobbly. If a stable environment were all it took we could have recreated the process many times.
Re:Panspermia (Score:3)
Re:Panspermia (Score:2)
God? (Ducks!)
Indeed -- not God, but Ducks! Some might say they're one in the same (especially the ducks). And given ducks' well-known sexual proclivities, a theory of panspermia where basically every object in the galactic vicinity, even those with no chance of the payload taking root, being "inseminated", makes a lot of sense.
Re:Panspermia (Score:2)
If it talks like a God, walks like a God and looks like a God it's a Duck?
Re:Panspermia (Score:2)
It wouldn't have been DNA; DNA is too complicated and has problems replicating without a bunch of machinery. RNA is one possibility, though I personally have the feel that it is too complicated as well. One example of a hypothesed simpler pathway is Cairn-Smith's Clay hypothesis (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abiogenesis#Clay_hypothesis) though experiments indicate that clay crystals likely aren't stable enough to work for this purpose. However, there only needs to be some kind of material with the right properties, and then evolution rapidly creates variation and more advanced structures. (For more on abiogenesis, you may want to see the nice talk.origins FAQ at http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/abioprob/originoflife.html [talkorigins.org])
Re:Panspermia (Score:5, Informative)
For those to lazy to read about it, scientists have created all of the amino acids required by life, using nothing but inorganic compounds, by recreating the atmospheric conditions of early Earth.
Life may or may not have originated on Earth, but we tested it and found that it could have. If it could have been created here, using nothing but the things that the universe placed here, why couldn't it have also developed else where? Are we the seeding planet of the galaxy/universe? Were we seeded? Or is life just incredibly common?
Re:Panspermia (Score:2, Informative)
You're not still dragging out that tired old experiment, are you? Have you figured out how many orders of magnitude (both in terms of probability and complexity) bare amino acids are away from the simplest self-replicating thing we have found on earth so far? You'll need a lot more experimental evidence than just Miller-Urey to bridge the gap between inorganic compounds and life.
(Yes, there are experiments that show self-replication of specially-designed ad hoc molecules, but the experimenters have to provide all the raw materials in just the right amounts for those experiments to work. Not exactly realistic pre-biotic conditions.)
Re:Panspermia (Score:4, Insightful)
It began raining on the Earth about 4-4.4 billion years ago, meaning surface temperatures and atmospheric conditions were stable enough for the oceans to accumulate. Some of the earliest evidence of biochemical alteration of the atmosphere (banded iron formations) first appear about 3.7 billion years ago. That's over 500 million years for naturally occurring amino acids to jump to self-replication and then to simple prokaryotes. Now, think about the rate at which microorganisms reproduce. 500Ma is about as much time as its taken for life to jump from single-celled forms to modern vertebrates, etc.
Panspermia includes too many unknown and slim chances. And, as mentioned elsewhere in these posts, where are these life-seeding bolides coming from?
Re:Panspermia (Score:2)
where are these life-seeding bolides coming from?
Did you know that all of the elements on Earth heavier than iron were once inside a star? It's true - and not our star, either.
Re:Panspermia (Score:2)
Heavier than iron? don't recall exactly, but I thought our star wasn't in the stage yet where it was producing carbon. Is it making a lot of lithium yet? And now that I think of it, possibly a lot of our hydrogen has been part of a star as well.
I think everything heavier than iron was made in a supernova.
Re:Panspermia (Score:2)
I think everything heavier than iron was made in a supernova.
Very briefly inside a star, then, for generous values of "inside".
Re:Panspermia (Score:2)
Fine with me. But why start at Iron? The only element on earth that hasn't necessarily been inside a star before is hydrogen. Forget about the lithium btw, that was a mixup. Anyway, I'm not sure the sun is making carbon without looking that up, but certainly nothing above it.
Re:Panspermia (Score:2)
Dubnium was reportedly first discovered in 1968 at the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research at Dubna (then in the Soviet Union). Researchers there bombarded an americium-243 target with neon-22 ions. [wikipedia.org]
The americium-243 was almost certainly formed inside of a star, so... yes. Heavier than iron elements are typically formed in supernovae fusion processes. They may be created in nuclear fusion bombs or experiments also, but not in your specifically referenced experiment - which involved fission.
Re:Panspermia (Score:2)
Amino acids don't self replicate. That's what DNA (or RNA) is for. However, your primary point is still valid. Time allows nature to futz around until something works. 500 million years is a long time. A very long time.
Re:Panspermia (Score:2)
Also any chemist knows that you always get a little of an unlikely reaction product if your original volume is big enough, or you mix things for long enough. You only need to make a self-replicator (or just a vaguely catalytic) product once.
Re:Panspermia (Score:2)
Other planets.
You can have both.
Hell, Human beings could be wiped out by a giant piece of rock from a destroy planed, and organic compound on that rock could eventually become the new life forms.
Re:Panspermia (Score:2)
Of course Miller-Urey is pretty irrelevant now that we've found amino acids floating in clouds in space. They're everywhere.
Anyway, so we're accepting that spontaneous assembly of self-replicating molecules is possible in principle, but appealing to the low probability of the right conditions appearing. Well, billions of years of constant change due to geologic activity and countless deep-ocean vents of varying compositions, plus the fact that we're here, suggests that while the probability may be low, the expected value of the experiment over that time frame is not so low.
Re:Panspermia (Score:2)
No it isn't. It shows that amino acids can come from inorganic compounds. Being on Earth isn't needed.
Re:Panspermia (Score:2)
No it isn't. It shows that amino acids can come from inorganic compounds. Being on Earth isn't needed.
Sorry, what are you saying? We've discovered amino acids all over the place in space. The experiment showing that amino acids can arise naturally is thus largely redundant with the direct observation of naturally occurring amino acids.
Re:Panspermia (Score:2)
How many orders of magnitude? Ok, let's say that the odds of those amino acids forming a self replicating 'thing' are 1000000000000 less likely than the formation of the amino acids themselves. It took Miller-Urem 1 gallon of water and 1 week of time to produce virtual every amino acid required for life. Now instead of a gallon, you have the entire surface area of the Earth's oceans at the time. And instead of a week you have millions, if necessary billions of years. Every time someone talks about how bad the odds are for evolution or abiogenesis, I have to wonder if they are really thinking about what they're saying. Yes, the odds are going to be long. Very, very long. But so is the scale, both in size and time.
Re:Panspermia (Score:2)
Re:Panspermia (Score:2)
So you mean mom was right - you are evil alien spawn?
Re:Panspermia (Score:2)
I'll offer a view that goes the other way round, that of the irrelevance of panspermia. Life originated on earth because under the right conditions that is inevitable. Incoming meteorites with life or predecessors of life wouldn't have made any difference. Life on other planets is hard. Incoming seeds originating from earth wouldn't make any difference.
If you look at the origins of panspermia theories however, they're of the silly kind: "life is very difficult to start so it must have come from elsewhere".
Re:Panspermia (Score:5, Interesting)
So your version of God isn't all-knowing and all-powerful? I'm not buying that a God who is capable of creating billions of planets, stars, and systems wouldn't have a firm grasp on probability and interstellar trajectories. Maybe we should consider that your God is bored (he does control everything, right?) and has set up the universe as a giant Rube Goldberg machine for His entertainment. He would have to accede to non-interference for the exercise to have any value.
Re:Panspermia (Score:3)
I think God started the world 6000 years ago, but the only way to get everything looking right so that it looked much older, was to run a full simulation of the whole history of the universe beforehand and then switch to the real thing, like switching between a virtual machine and a physical computer. All in His Head of course. You can't put a few dinosaur bones in the ground and withstand deeper and deeper scrutiny, now and with the technology of 1000 years from now, without ever failing. Not unless you just run the complete simulated history first.
Re:Panspermia (Score:2)
Cool, someone modded this insightful. Well actually the switch from simulation to reality happened 10 minutes ago. Setting up all the brains with all the memories was one of the easier challenges.
No wait, it did happen 6000 years ago. The switch suddenly made people responsible for their actions, gave them free will and stuff. Yeah, that should be it.
Re:Panspermia (Score:2)
and all galactic life will be like star trek (Score:2)
humanoids walking on two feet with funny heads
Re:and all galactic life will be like star trek (Score:2)
There are a lot of advantages to being bipedal. On planets with land.
Re:and all galactic life will be like star trek (Score:2)
We still haven't found extraforgostic life. [slashdot.org]
that's depressing (Score:5, Funny)
so the culmination of mankind's civilization, scientific efforts, and technological achievements, is to go to some exoplanet, only to find some foot fungus some dinosaur had long before mankind ever appeared?
Place Bets Here (Score:3, Interesting)
Hmmm, made it to other Earth-like planets instead of randomly catching a closer strong gravitational field or drifting randomly into nothingness.
Even making Europa would be kind of like hitting a cockroach with a needle from across a football stadium.
Oh to be the house, if this scientist ever landed in Vegas with a wallet-load... Sounds like someone needs to re-fill the ol' grant jar.
Re:Place Bets Here (Score:3)
Apparently you've forgotten about gravity.
Re:Place Bets Here (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Place Bets Here (Score:2)
To add to my Vegas theme, consider the planets are moving like a roulette wheel. Further consider that gravity could also act as a slingshot rather than a mitt, dependent on distance from the modifying source it approaches. The numbers of the odds just roll like cherries, bells and bars on a slot machine, the more criteria you add.
Re:Place Bets Here (Score:2)
Yeah, time seems to help but , I'm still considering the viability problems of a viable amount making it to a viable place during a suitable phase in its development barring competition from other more readily suited "geo-spermatozoa" and considering the amount of time it took to develop here, has it developed there.
Damn we need a reply to group option or the ability to explode a particular parent so a group can bounce ideas off each other for more efficient discussion.
Re:Place Bets Here (Score:3)
Which gravity? The Suns? Are you assuming the ejecta came out in a general direction available to magically put it under the weak gravitational field of planets and moons so distant it would be like trying to get a BB to stick to a magnet by throwing it across the stadium? Did you not take into account how many directions are available that do not line up with the motions of our Suns hub of planets and asteroids? If it went in an upwards direction relative to our position around the sun, even nearby gravity would steer it only a bit as it flew at amazing speeds through the vacuum to nowhere in particular. Reach a distant system from there? Did you win the Mega-millions jackpot? No? Probably just some organic space crap floating somewhere to this day.
It's probably nicer to think of it in the role that this story imagines it, just not very likely. I just can't make myself see it. I'll see it when I believe it or visa versa, whatever.
Re:Place Bets Here (Score:2)
You do realize the solar system is not necessarily aligning its orbital plane with the galactic orbital plane, and that the volume of the galaxy around it's orbital plane is enormous?
Something going "up" isn't heading out of the galaxy necessarily. In fact, unless it achieves galactic escape velocity, or falls into a conduit of unusual gravity interactions, then it's going to be orbit in and be captured by something, somewhere, eventually.
Re:Place Bets Here (Score:2)
Then how many degrees of direction did stuff go, how did it disperse the further it got, how much useful material will fall in a useful place at what stage of development and potential for survival of the place then to find the time needed and then to have potential to rise above any other "geo- sperm" from " competing" sources. The more I think about this the more I get like Hawking about contacting aliens. There are just so many things that seem to work against this, I'm not seeing odds I can live with yet.
Good point, BTW.
Re:Place Bets Here (Score:2)
Re:Place Bets Here (Score:2)
I'm thinking of all that and considering the sheer volume of null targets and trajectories that are more likely even in the face of gravity if you consider the wide splatter trajectory. Then there's the other thought that there might be an ejection of something a bit more chunky and less dispersed and what could keep it from finding a chance trajectory that would take it to a viable planet and still be able to make it to evolved life in this amount of time.
Not sure how well rocks evolve or if they hold enough potential to make the dif, What amount of material would be feasable in what environment and the chances for finding that environment.
I can't deny that bits from here end up there and visa versa, But I'm beginning to see success in this being equal in odds to having a viable million dollars land on ME! lol.
You are exceptional (Score:5, Insightful)
Astounding! With just a few minutes of thought and your superior intuition, you've dismissed the result of careful calculation and decades of training on the part of this group of scientists. Imagine what a genius of your magnitude could accomplish from within the scientific system...it truly staggers my humble intellect! But I'm sure you're working on much more important things.
Re:You are exceptional (Score:2)
Noticing that the king wears no clothes is one thing, and not appropriate, but yes, I question the absence of his codpiece.
Now if you have any information about the physical absence of his genetalic cover, I would appreciate some of this insight your fanboys have endowed you with.
Re:You are exceptional (Score:2)
You're just a trash tabloid staff editorialist unless you actually read the paper and comment intelligently on their methods. I suppose you might get some play on the National Enquirer... I mean Slashdot, but that doesn't make you clever or insightful.
Re:You are exceptional (Score:2)
I really wish I could get all you guys to see all the posts, this has potential for a fun conversation if you increase your perspective.
Relax, grab a beer( unless it's too early there) and let's think about this.
I'd say it would even be a treat if we all skimmed some of it, had our little thread thingy, made our "BETS" as implied originally, then go back for some research from our perspective.
I bet you give gifts unwrapped, don't you?
Re:You are exceptional (Score:2)
Sorry, you've lost me. I read the whole thread. I was following your "emperor has no clothes" metaphor. What is it we're thinking about? Your vague assertion that "even making Europa would be kind of like hitting a cockroach with a needle from across a football stadium" followed by some silliness about Vegas and grants?
Re:You are exceptional (Score:2)
It actually started with Vegas,grants and cockroaches in the stadium.
Odds, think odds and the criteria it takes to get it there.
Re:Place Bets Here (Score:3)
Even making Europa would be kind of like hitting a cockroach with a needle from across a football stadium.
True. Now explode a pile of trillions of needles and see if any one of them hit the cockroach.
Oh to be the house, if this scientist ever landed in Vegas with a wallet-load...
If the bet was that any of the visitors to Vegas would win the slot machine jackpot, the house might not be as willing to make the wager as you.
Of course they'd only make that decision after doing what this scientist did, and actually calculating the expected pay-out. Estimating probabilities by gut feel isn't going to make you a winner in Vegas, even if you are the house.
Re:Place Bets Here (Score:2)
I dunno about a trillion. Let's add that to the mix though.
If it were that means the ejecta really splattered like Gallaghers melon in a lot of directions, but also that smaller amounts went with each "packet". perhaps a few "needles"were icy raindrops and hit. Then you face odds of survival. How's earthlife going to do as an ice chunk of earth water or frozen mudball on the surface of an icy moon? Of course the odds of these raindrops (which are still dispersing further from each other, the further they travel in this splatter scenario. This makes the odds of further planets getting a survivable amount of "geo- sperm" less than Europas.
Even then we must consider the many directions it could go. We're not too far from the edge of the Milky- Way, did it go toward or away? Even up or down from that perspective are options. Then let's not forget gravity. This stuff could be flying around space in chunks or pieces to this day and not land anywhere.
Martin Lo's low energy trajectories (Score:5, Informative)
Actually Martin Lo discovered low energy gravitational paths or "superhighways" that would allow objects like space probes and maybe rocks to travel all around the solar system without power. These calculations were used in the Genesis probe NASA project IIRC.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interplanetary_Transport_Network [wikipedia.org]
http://genesismission.jpl.nasa.gov/gm2/team/people/lo/interview1.htm [nasa.gov]
Re:Martin Lo's low energy trajectories (Score:2)
Now that's a consideration too, another spin of the wheel in space-Vegas.
Might an x % or even all of this be stuck on some pan-galactic Nascar track to nowhere?
I wish I could get all you guys to see each others posts and ideas to add to the odds, it would make this thread a blast!
Re:Martin Lo's low energy trajectories (Score:2)
And yes that increases the odds of it hitting something in our system, acknowledged. But the value of icy chunks landing on an icy surface with our homegrown life starts then being able to evolve usefully in this amount of time is in question. The Mars thing would be cool and it would give some "Enquirer prestige " to some Russian Scientist rumoured to have seen a "scorpion" like thingamadoo on a Venus pic. (lol, maybe that was the Enquirer someone told me about)
Re:Place Bets Here (Score:2)
More like hitting a cockroach with a needle from across a football stadium, and you have millions of needles being launched at speeds well high enough to leave orbit. And then every so often you fire your needle cannon again and again.
To put this in perspective, all you have to do is look at the moon. The chances of any given spot on the moon being hit by an impact are incredibly small, so small they are astronomical. However when you look at the moon, you can see the entire thing is covered with impact craters. Your proverbial needle is being fired at your proverbial cockroach in large quantities, again and again. Sooner or later your cockroach /is/ going to get hit by a needle, a second needle and so on.
It also helps that their are what you could conceptually think of as gravity highways in space. Now you've discovered that your needles aren't just firing across the stadium randomly, but that the cannon is at least firing in their general direction.
http://www.popsci.com/military-aviation-amp-space/article/2009-09/scientists-map-out-gravitational-space-highways [popsci.com]
Re:Place Bets Here (Score:2)
O.K. this has come up in this thread and this is a better example of the space highway thing. Thank you.
This spins the odds back down to something a bit more in grasp, but the viability/distance/dillution thing vs. finding a suitable planet in a suitable age of development is still giving me pause. Although the enormity of time does help a bit.
Good one.
I wish slashdot would implement a feature where we could explode any parent and its children so the group could see the conversation and we could bounce ideas off each other. That would've helped my intent with this, as the Vegas theme seems to be going nowhere.
Re:Place Bets Here (Score:3)
I don't think you were trolling, which I think some of the other posters may have assumed. In essence, I'm conceding your point that for any given piece of debris to make it to a given location is absurdly low, even by astronomical standards. Certainly the odds are so bad that the bet probably would not be legal is Las Vegas.
The thing that makes this paper viable though is that I don't have one piece of debris or just one shot. A large impact like the one that wiped out the dinosaurs could make millions of pieces of debris large enough to survive entry. Repeat this enough times over the years, take into account natural gravity paths between objects and /some/ of those pieces are going to make it to other planets. Give enough time and some of those pieces will even make it to other solar systems.
The meat of the matter is calculating all the "x's" and "y's" that make up the equations. Think of it as being similar to the Drake equation. The more we learn about things like the popularity of planets in other solar systems, the better we can place a value on the given "x" or "y" that is used to come up with the answer.
Or to use your gambling scenario in Las Vegas. Chances are really good for any given bet (piece of debris) that it's going to lose and that the house will win. Certainly in the long run the house is the consistently safer bet to put your money on.
That being said, if you have enough gamblers (pieces of debris) gambling enough times (another piece of debris) eventually someone will win a jackpot (bacteria survives re-entry). How big that jackpot is (bacteria can live and reproduce on another planetary body) and whether or not it become headline producing (bacteria evolves into intelligent life) are entirely up to conjecture. The logic is scientifically sound, the only question is what are the odds, and that is what the scientific paper was trying to address.
Re:Place Bets Here (Score:2)
Give this man a cigar!
That brings us closer to fruition than any post yet.
I still have reservations about timeline and possibility of reaching somewhere that bacteria could eventually work up to legs and cable television, but now I would at least drop a small bet on the table, just in case.
Re:Place Bets Here (Score:2)
It could be too that most usually take my cynicism for trolling, but I am fairly jolly today and it has some bearing.
I still think the /. system could benefit from including some advanced thread abilities to facilitate group oriented discussion in a round table style. Checking messages doesn't always show whats going on elsewhere in the thread.
Re:Place Bets Here (Score:2)
And it makes some speculation amongst geeks on a forum kind of a fun thing.
Kind of like an impromptu open-source peer review. We could call it a beer review if that would make you more happy and less troll-y , Mr. Grumpy pants.
Re:Place Bets Here (Score:2)
Now that's funny, I don't care who you are.
What's a Tebow? (*seizes your nerd credentials*)
Sub 1cm Ejecta (Score:5, Interesting)
How do objects this size survive the trip through the destination planet's atmosphere?
Re:Sub 1cm Ejecta (Score:2)
Some of them are big enough, others hitch a ride on comets or asteroids.
There are pieces of Mars littering Earth. It happens.
Re:Sub 1cm Ejecta (Score:2)
Re:Sub 1cm Ejecta (Score:2)
depends on the atmosphere and speed, but probably. Of course, 'burning up' doesn't mean the mass goes away, just changes.
Re:Sub 1cm Ejecta (Score:2)
Burning up usually turns 'live' mass into 'dead' mass though.
Re:Sub 1cm Ejecta (Score:2)
Well, I also considered that, but what happens when a 1cm object is attached to a bigger one, which then enters another planet's atmosphere? It would be the first thing that ablates off, or would be near the surface when it hits the ground at supersonic speeds. Either way, living things on small things have no realistic chance of making it down to the surface alive.
Galactica (Score:3)
There are those who believe that life out there began here
Flung far across the universe, before there were tribes of humans...
Worth a read, but ... (Score:5, Interesting)
I've made a quick scan of the underlying academic article by Hara et al., along with one of my colleagues in a meeting here, who is closely involved in the issue of planetary protection (i.e. making sure that our spacecraft don't "pollute" the solar system bodies they fly to and land on).
Of course, this is a known issue in general: after all, there are meteorites on Earth which we know came from Mars, so the converse is obviously possible. But extending this to moons of Jupiter, Kuiper Belt objects, and even exoplanetary systems, and finding that a significant number of Earth rocks may have been dumped there is interesting. So, the article is worth a more careful read.
However, my antennae were sent into a state of high agitation when I saw that the article has been posted on the arXiV following its having been accepted to the infamous Journal of Cosmology. We've discussed that here before: I invite you to view the journal website (easily found by googling) and decide for yourselves how reputable it is.
Which raises the question of why Hara et al. chose to publish there. That I can't answer, obviously, but will keep it firmly in mind as I read the paper in more detail.
Re:Worth a read, but ... (Score:2)
Because it's rather long on speculation and short on facts?
And because there's no way to test any of this for a very long time to come?
Re:Worth a read, but ... (Score:2)
Well, in principle the paper is a fairly simple series of mathematical equations which you could actually work out on the back of an envelope. The devil though is in the details, namely the numerical parameters input to those equations. While many of those are straightforward and well-known, some may enter that category of WAGs (wild-assed guesses), and it's quite possible that the equations are particularly sensitive to (some of) those. That's why it's worth reading, to try and figure out where the issues may be.
As for the testability side, you're right, of course: very hard. But again, since we know of Martian rocks having made it to Earth via this mechanism, we can at least start to use some hard numbers based on that to try and constrain the likelihood of the Earth rocks having made it to other planets / moons.
Re:Worth a read, but ... (Score:2)
Sorry, you're both correct: to say that we "know" was perhaps too strong a statement on my part. It was just meant as a scientific shorthand for "some smart folks really really think they came from Mars and they have some really strong arguments (and data) to support that claim", as you wrote.
It might have been better to say something like it is strongly believed that, or it is very likely that, or the most likely interpretation is that, or there is a very strong case for, and so on. But it's a pretty common shorthand in science to say "we know", and everybody understanding what is meant by such a statement without delving into the deeper recesses of epistemology.
In answer to the point made that "we were never there", err, where? Mars? No, we, as people, were not; but we, via some pretty capable robots, were. One of the fundamental pieces of evidence that scientists use to justify the claim that we have Mars rocks on Earth is that trapped gases in them have an isotopic ratio that matches that of the Martian atmosphere as measured by Viking, not that of Earth.
Absolutely, positively? No, science doesn't deal in those statements. Based on all available evidence, so likely that it's perfectly reasonable to effectively rule out nuttier alternatives? Yes.
Tasty aliens... (Score:4)
If we share common ancestry, that means we might find alien life tasty and nutritious. ... to seek out new life and new civilizations, to eat.
Re:Tasty aliens... (Score:3)
To Serve Man, anyone?
tired... (Score:2)
To Serve Man
From my limited experience with mankind, more like " Silence of the Popplers ".
Re:Tasty aliens... (Score:2)
Panspermia seems like it would make for a good handwave in science fiction why humans could find edible food on an alien planet, or have to worry about alien diseases. I have a hard time believing life could actually spread from planet to planet this way. But I'm not a physicist or biologist.
Re:Tasty aliens... (Score:2)
But, whoever develops interstellar travel first will no doubt have the technological edge to be the taster and not the tastee. Why was E.T.'s belly so big and were Reese's Pieces a favorite garnish?
Fermi's Paradox solved. (Score:2)
So, without realizing it, we're ALREADY colonizing our galaxy. Life bearing rocks from earth hit other planets, those planets also experience trauma sooner or later, ejecting their rocks into space millions of years later, after life had caught on, and so on and so on.
Therefore, Earth may be a colony of some other civilization from billions of years ago, or, we're creating colonies as we speak.
How did life survive the heat of the impact (Score:2)
I could believe that some simple life form could suvive on a rock travelling through space for millions of years, but I don't see how it would have survived the heat of the impact event that blasted it beyond escape velocity in the first place
(at least life as we know it, Jim)
Re:How did life survive the heat of the impact (Score:2)
Most non-dinosaur killing meteorites land cold.
Re:How did life survive the heat of the impact (Score:3)
ummm...? (Score:2)
How can we study the trajectory when we don't know:
When the asteroid hit?
The earth's position relative to the sun, the other planet, and the rest of the stars in the galaxy at the time of impact.
The direction from which the asteroid hit us.
The size of the asteroid.
For starters....
An OK theory for other planets, but not ours? (Score:2)
Panspermia is a very interesting/compelling theory. But I'd avoid telling anyone in academia that you're interested in an Earth genesis hypothesis other than evolution.
You may just as well have told them that you're a pro-lifer, who voted for Bush, are home schooling your kids, believe in a balanced budget, and are a racist all in one sentence.
Re:An OK theory for other planets, but not ours? (Score:3)
Evolution isn't an origin-of-life theory. You're thinking of abiogenesis.
Re:An OK theory for other planets, but not ours? (Score:2)
I'd avoid telling anyone in academia that you think evolution is an "Earth genesis hypothesis".
Re:An OK theory for other planets, but not ours? (Score:2)
Oh bullshit. Panspermia has been around for decades and lots of mainline scientists (including Francis Crick, one it's earliest proponents) have thought it interesting.
But it is more entertainment than anything else - until we get off planet enough to test it. A dozen probes to Mars and a Europa would be good start, but as always - if you've got the money, I've got the time....
simple math, brought to you by Google Calculator (Score:3, Interesting)
number of molecules per gram = (Avogadro's Number) / 12 grams = 5.02E25 molecules/kg
2 trillion tonnes = 2E15 kg
(5.02E25 molecules / kg * 2E15 kg) = 1.004E41 molecules
Surface area of sphere with radius of 20 light years = 4.499E35 meters^2
1.004E41 molecules / 4.499 meters^2 = 223,091 molecules / meter^2 == 4.44 attograms of carbon per square meter.
This is a pretty thin layer of material to survive reentry on some 20 light year distant planet.
--------
Alternatively, from google: ((Avogadro's number / (12 grams)) * (2 trillion tonnes)) / (4 * pi * ((20 lightyears)^2)) = 0.223099739 kilometers per liter = 0.5 miles/US gallon, which means we totally need to collect some gas guzzler tax on this material
Re:simple math, brought to you by Google Calculato (Score:2)
Fortunately rocks aren't light. Their atoms tend to stay clumped together instead of spreading out uniformly like photons.
Re-entry may not be that challenging (Score:4, Interesting)
Just a thought here, but I don't think re-entry would be that challenging for bacteria based life to survive. Most people think that what left of an asteroid is really hot when they land, but that just isn't the case. In fact asteroids have been touched right after landing and described as 'cool' in temperature.
http://impact.arc.nasa.gov/news_detail.cfm?ID=1 [nasa.gov]
If bacteria were in the core part of the asteroid that survived impact it should be reasonable to assume that the part that is cool to the touch never got hot enough to kill any bacteria that were inside it. The other two questions than become what kind of shock (g-forces) can bacteria survive? We know they can survive the shock of being launched into space, and without the squishy bodies that we have they may well survive the shock of re-entry.
If we could determine the answers to those questions than really the only questions remaining are can bacteria adapt to their new home? We already know they live in places on earth that are very inhospitable by our standards. The only other real question is how long can they survive in space? We have documented cases of bacteria surviving in space for years at a time. If there is no real limit to how long they can survive in space than cross solar system colonization is all but inevitable.
Re:Re-entry may not be that challenging (Score:2)
Tardigrades (water bears) might have a chance. http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2012/04/tardigrade-eggs-space/ [wired.com]
IIRC, some spores might also do so.
Re:the dark side of the moon IS A TRAP! (Score:2)
Really? Is that like if you play it backwards you hear the voice of the devil or something
Noom eht yb despilce si nus eht tub enut si nus eht rednu gnihtyreve
it's a FACT. it's on WIKIPEDIA. (Score:2)
Re:Really? (Score:2)
yeah, it's a fact. Giant craters, layer of material around the globe. etc...
Re:Don't you mean... (Score:5, Insightful)