Possible Signs of Life Detected On Venus 283
MoThugz writes "This article from the The Houston Chronicle discusses the discovery of mysterious swirling patches on the surface of the planet which may be communities of bacteria. These bacteria might be a genetically-enhanced version of the thermophiles which are known to survive in extreme temperatures. The article suggested the bacteria could be using ultraviolet light from the sun as an energy source, which would explain the presence of strange dark patches on ultraviolet images of the planet."
See also (Score:3, Informative)
But wait, must grab some karma!
Any life on venus must be female, afterall, men are from mars....
Also
Remember that astronomers once said Mars was covered with a complex network of irrigation ditches, which implied the presence of life. Take this with a grain of salt - we know so little about our own solar system that we must treat all discoveries as hypotheses - nothing more, nothing less.
yadda yadda
I guess fp is too much to hope for
Re:See also - Funny! Etc. (Score:5, Insightful)
I believe the appropriate karma to follow should be tagged "Funny". :-) Community moderation at work!
And now, to make my post important enough for it to avoid the dreaded zero...
Regarding life anywhere; Steve Grand makes a very interesting point about life in his book "Creation"; it's not tied to the matter that makes life up but rather the patterns in how things connect. The analogy he drew was how clouds are not static bodies of steam but rather areas inside which the water carried by air becomes visible. Like ripples in the water, we only borrow the atoms in our own bodies for a while, binding them to the patterns of interaction that make us unquestionably alive.
While it's far fetched to imagine even bugs on Venusian surface, it is not impossible to envision bacteria evolving from the complex interactions of heat and gases in the atmosphere. All evolution needs to kick off is a fertile playground, a pattern that can replicate itself with a degree of variation, and a lucky roll of dice.
If there indeed *is* bacteria discovered on Venus it would suggest the dice of the universe are heavily loaded with a bias towards generating life. It's that bias which would determine not just whether we are alone but just how crowded it can this universe get after a while. On the other hand, the Venusians have quite a few hundred million years to catch up with their Terran cousins.
Although, with the moderation above points, one has to wonder. :-)
Jouni
Re:See also - Funny! Etc. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:See also - Funny! Etc. (Score:4, Informative)
[Ob.Disclaimer: IANA Smarty Man] Technically, we really have no idea what conditions are necessary to "kick off" evolution. We've deduced that evolution is in effect, based on observable phenomena, but that's about as far as we've gotten. We're still not sure exactly what conditions got it started on Earth, where we actually have the thing to work with. Making statements about how likely Venus is to meet these conditions is laughably premature. We don't know enough about evolution or Venus to do more than gather data and look for patterns.
If there indeed *is* bacteria discovered on Venus it would suggest the dice of the universe are heavily loaded with a bias towards generating life.
Another alternative is that the "dice of the universe" are biased against life, and the presence of life in our solar system is a statistical anomaly produced by some other effect. Certainly the universe in general is extremely hostile to life as we know it.
There could be life in half the star systems in our galaxy, and the dice would still be heavily biased against life in general. If there were life in half the star systems in the universe, that would still only suggest--to me, anyway--that the dice have no particular bias one way or the other, everything else being equal. But I admit that these things are nowhere near my area of expertise.
Whoa... (Score:5, Funny)
These guys are GOOD!
Sounds familiar... (Score:2, Redundant)
Re:Sounds familiar... (Score:3, Redundant)
If anything, the previous New Scientist article provides more information.
Re:Sounds familiar... (Score:5, Funny)
All together now, "Hello, Timothy."
Not on the surface! (Score:5, Informative)
News flash! Geeks finally find women... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:News flash! Geeks finally find women... (Score:3, Funny)
Not Likely (Score:5, Interesting)
But, hey, the sientisist will get a headline or two, and perhaps even a few dollars to spend. I'm just saying that there are reasons to stretch the reality just a bit sometimes. Often these reasons are political or economical. In this case I'd have to go for the latter.
Re:Not Likely (Score:2)
Bacteria (Score:4, Funny)
Re: Bacteria (Score:4, Funny)
> Mysterious things are happening to my dishes too. I keep delaying the wash to save the communities of bacterias who will win me a Nobel.
Re:Bacteria (Score:3, Funny)
Of course, he neglected to wash his petri-dishes, but it brought him a Nobel anyway.
Re:Bacteria (Score:2, Informative)
FAR more compelling EVIDENCE = CO levels (Score:5, Interesting)
All the free carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide gasses are too low in concentrations expected.
SOMETHING is getting rig of them... a likely suspect is a biological activity from a microbial lifefrom.
The patches are just a MINOR piece of the puzzle, this header to this article should not have been written without revealing the alarming absence of expected carbon gasses.
Re:FAR more compelling EVIDENCE = CO levels (Score:5, Interesting)
Whilst on Earth carbonyl sulphide might be made by biological processes, it is quite possible that the high temperature and pressure of the lower Venusian atmosphere is generating the chemicals without biological intervention.
It's interesting, but I'm quite literally not holding my breath.
Best wishes,
Mike.
Re:FAR more compelling EVIDENCE = CO levels (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:FAR more compelling EVIDENCE = CO levels (Score:5, Informative)
Re:FAR more compelling EVIDENCE = CO levels (Score:5, Insightful)
The Russians actually landed a probe on Venus (in fact, I seem to remember two of them landing). Is it possible this new evidence for microbes might actually be getting caused by microbes we introduced there?
Eh, it's just a random thought. Anything seems a likely explanation at this point. You can't always tell when it comes to the chemical processes of an alien world.
-----
Re:FAR more compelling EVIDENCE = CO levels (Score:3, Informative)
Actually...... (Score:3, Funny)
Might? (Score:2, Interesting)
after so many "ooh, we were wrong's" are scientists still so trigger happy on announcing "possible life on x"?
Definite Possibility! (Score:5, Insightful)
I think the theory is that you have a coupla "whizz bang" announcments a year and hope that enough people get into the sciencey thing and become inventors, engineers, fizzysists etc...
Otherwise most people would go back to watching "Big Brother" or "Pop Idol" or some equally vacuous "entertainment"... after many years of this the TV system would eventually fall into disrepair and the ensuing social chaos would cause untold destruction.
probly.
Re:Definite Possibility! (Score:4, Insightful)
Personally I would prefer an ignorant populace to the credible, misinformed boobs that surround me.
I work with people who believe we never landed on the moon, because of a television special
Even as a child I could distingush reality from fantasy. Someone needs to instill these people with a sense of critical, rational thinking.
I think I'm going to go read James Randi [randi.org] and be fanatically skeptical now.
Re:Definite Possibility! (Score:2, Insightful)
I mean.... just look at marketing and advertising.....
Re:Definite Possibility! (Score:3, Insightful)
What I think you favor is a skeptical humility, and this story encourages exactly that: we (dogmatically) thought that there is no way anything can live on Venus. But it seems that when we critically examine that assumption, it is no longer so clear. Great! I say this is an excellent example of sound reasoning. The whole point of the research seems to be that we must check our assumptions... and that is a valuable lesson indeed for the credulous public.
Occam's Razor (Score:5, Insightful)
Life (even microbial life) is so extremely complex, that is seems implausable to jump to the conclusion that life must be present, simply because of a chemical marker which we find hard to make without the help of microbes!
These guys should be concentrating on eliminating other possibilities, rather than just jumping onto the News Bandwagon to get their latest 'discovery of life' publicised.
Re:Occam's Razor (Score:5, Interesting)
However, these scientists didn't choose. They said it might be life, or it might be an unknown chemical process.
They lean to the life option because in this case microbes are much more efficient than inorganic processes (a valid Occam's Razor conclusion)
Re:Occam's Razor (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Occam's Razor (Score:5, Insightful)
So we have a chemical marker which we have no knowledge of occuring naturally unless mircrobes are present.
Apply Occam's Razor to that and you come to the conclusion that there is possibly life.
Pretty fair conclusion imho
Re:Occam's Razor (Score:4, Interesting)
To ask which is more likely, that life forms are instigating these reactions, or undiscovered caches of inorganic catylists are... the answer fundamentally hinges on how high you think the lowest hurdle for life's emergence is, and how prevalent you think life is in the universe. (And I'm not talking "greys").
There are a good number of people looking for more basic life in the universe [seti.org] that are of the opinion that life can begin in places much more hostile than blue planet Earth. They're looking to test the idea that basic, basic life is going to crop up wherever possible and then evolutionarily "dare" planetary conditions to kill it off. Just think about it, when life first emerged here the rocks had just barely solidified and the only thing we really had going for us was liquid water. Most of this planet's geologic history has been the three billion years between the emergence of prokaryotes, and the evolution of cells with proper nucleii.
What really is the simplest explanation? (Score:2)
Re:Occam's Razor (Score:2)
The most useful statement of the principle for scientists is,
"when you have two competing theories which make exactly the same predictions, the one that is simpler is the better."
Might I add something to the last sentence?
"...the one that is simpler is the better, unless the other one promises fundamentaly more funding and/or publicity"
That should explain it...
Ockham's razor vs. James Lovelock (Score:4, Informative)
Back in the 1960s, when the U.S. was planning the first Mars lander to look for signs of life, NASA scientists were proposing instruments such as traps for sand fleas. NASA gave Lovelock some money to look into whether they were going about this appropriately.
Lovelock [noosphere.cc] did not believe that there was life on Mars and proposed that anomalous gases in the atmosphere was the best test for ruling out the presence of life on a planet. As described in Nature [nature.com]:
This hypothesis has the advantage of strongly satisfying Popper's falsifiability requirement: If life must create a chemical balance in the atmosphere that is far from thermodynamic equilibrium, then it's easy to rule out life on a planet by demonstrating that its atmosphere is close to equilibrium.Of course, a non-equilibrium atmosphere is a necessary, not a sufficient condition, so further work must, of course, be carried out before reaching the conclusion that life must be present, but it's so rare to see such strong non-equilibrium conditions that this is indeed exciting news.
Not good news for terraformers (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Not good news for terraformers (Score:5, Funny)
If so, maybe Venus is the place for you.
Re:Not good news for terraformers (Score:2)
Re:Not good news for terraformers (Score:2)
And teraforming Venus is going to move it further away from the Sun?
Or is it that we are going to have a giant mirror in the upper atmosphere to defltect the Sun's rays?
Re:Not good news for terraformers (Score:3, Insightful)
Terraforming requirements (Score:3, Informative)
on Venus, which is more than you need to do to get
Earth-like conditions, the numbers go like this:
The area of mirrors required is approximately
equivalent to a 10,000 x 10,000 km square. If
formed of rolled sheet steel 1 micron thick, you
will need 0.1 cubic kilometers of steel. A small
iron-nickel asteroid will do nicely. To heat the
material for rolling, concentrated sunlight can
be used, focussed by some of the mirrors you made.
Thus what you need to start with is a seed
factory that can produce the parts for a rolling
mill.
Once you have the mirrors made, they can operate
as solar sails to deliver themselves to Venus
and maintain position once there.
Daniel
Re:Not good news for terraformers (Score:3, Insightful)
Perhaps you should check the definitions of the following words:
Sarcasm
Funny
Humor
Joke
Comedy
That is all.
Re:Not good news for terraformers (Score:2)
Re:Not good news for terraformers (Score:3, Informative)
Nah. Just slip a few spores of generically-altered atmospheric transfering bacteria, and it nobody will know who "fixed" Venus. They can complain all they want, but there is nobody to complain to
The biggest problem IMO is its slow rotation. A day is about 240 days. Perhaps a thick enough atmosphere will transfer heat evenly to the dark side.
Re:Not good news for terraformers (Score:2, Informative)
The biggest problem IMO is its slow rotation. A day is about 240 days.
Which is longer than the Venusian year which is 225 Earth days. Weird, huh?
Perhaps a thick enough atmosphere will transfer heat evenly to the dark side
Given that Earth's atmosphere isn't all that thick, and we're warm enough at night, I reckon a planet closer to the Sun would have reasonably (if not ridiculously) warm nights...
IMHO, Venus needs several things to be habitable:
My solution? Grab that Quaoar object everyone's in love with at the moment and smack it into Venus. Hit it right and all three criteria will be met :)
Slashdot is ruining everything! (Score:5, Funny)
Now you made Google News post old news as well and we get this chain of Google News from Slashdot News from Earlier Slashdot News (which I'm sure got covered on Google News as well).
Hm... On the other hand... Let's just blame it all on Houston Chronicle which posted the old story first.
Re:Slashdot is ruining everything! (Score:4, Interesting)
New slashdot category (Score:5, Funny)
I think we need a new category on Slashdot; "Wild speculation about extraterrestrial life based on insubstantial evidence".
Re:New slashdot category (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:New slashdot category (Score:2)
I don't think it is far fetched. However, it seems that whenever some odd phenomenon is seem on another planet the first conculsion these days seems to be that it is a sign of life, and more probable conclusions are ignored. I don't think real scientists do themselves justice by speculating on flimsy evidence.
Re:New slashdot category (Score:2)
They are just looking for the "best" places to probe around. If you are going to probe around, might as well pick spots with strange chemistry, organic or otherwise. We already gave the solar system a first go around. The second time is to focus on "interesting" spots.
It is the sensationalism that is the problem, not their methodology. I am not sure whose fault that is. A scientists says, "Hmmm. Odd chemistry. It just might be life" and the newspaper prints a story on it.
Re:New slashdot category (Score:2)
That is NOT true. Only the Viking probes were designed explicitly to detect life, but it has been decided that sample returns are probably the only way to know for sure. (Remote electron microscopes are another possiblity, but not technically feasible for affordable space missions yet.)
BTW, the Viking results were inconclusive. Some experiments suggested life, but they cannot rule out inorganic reasons.
Now if only... (Score:2, Insightful)
Seriously thou, would it be possible to send a scope to go pick some up. Obviously it would be expensive.. and the money could be spent better else where, but we know they won't so lets go with the flow and think about it... Not knowing much about venus, would the atmospheric pressure and gravitational forces be to high to send some sort of probe to enter the atmosphere and blast back out? (far off wacky idea I know, but I am bored)
Message Received (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Message Received (Score:2)
"All your UV are belong to us"
Trash talking scientist. (Score:5, Interesting)
Yeah, he's right. There is no such thing as airborn viruses....not
This is the comment of an entrenched and threatened scientist.
Plenty of extremephiles can live at 158 degrees. Plenty of viruses can live in the air. I've always thought venus has been too often overlooked. I belive it was because the russians made it there first.
Seems to me the ideal place to send a solar glider made of glass. Better solar power production than Earth. Thicker atmosphere than Mars. Easier to get to than mars. Least explored of our neighbors.
Re:Trash talking scientist. (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Trash talking scientist. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Trash talking scientist. (Score:2, Informative)
Even so, most textbooks will say it's a gray area, but generally come down on the side that viruses aren't technically alive because they don't have metabolic systems.
Re:Trash talking scientist. (Score:2)
Well, by this argument, you can argue that humans are "active" or "inactive" as well. At a certain point, perhaps through defects, in a very complex chemical process, certain chemical reactions cease and the human being becomes "inactive." The more popular term however, is "dead."
Re:Trash talking scientist. (Score:2)
How do you define it? A virus can certainly reproduce, with a host. Just like a human can reproduce, with a human of another sex. (Well, okay, they do it in different positions).
I think if the only real argument against a virus being life is that it needs a host to have to have what we recognize as life, then it's not a good definition. My personal opinion, though.
Re:Trash talking scientist. (Score:2)
There are plenty of alternative definitions. Some popular modern defninitions involve the capabilities of retaining low entropy. According to that definition, a virus is not alive by itself, but could be considered a part of the living system of the host.
Tor
Re:Trash talking scientist. (Score:2)
It is quite possible that life on Earth or Mars "seeded" Venus. There is more evidence that life can be "splashed around" by impacts lately.
Thus, given the choice between self-arising on Venus independently and being "infected" from Earth or Mars in the past, I think the second is the most likely based on the current (but flimsly) evidence.
On worlds like Mars, Europa, and Titan, the conditions for the formation of *primative* life are not that different WRT estimated probability. Thus, life may have formed on say Europa first, and then got splashed around the Solar System. It may have even come from another Solar System.
It is speculated by some that primative life is common throughout the Galaxy because of the robustness of "space-hardy" microbe spores that we are just learning about.
Natural selection will favor the spread and hardiness of such spores. It takes only one to ignite life on a condusive planet or moon.
Thus, the claim that inteligent life will not likely share our DNA (if found) may not really be true after all. We may be *related* to Zeta-ians after all.
I *still* don't want to go to yet more weddings though.
Re:Trash talking scientist. (Score:2, Insightful)
Well as a wanna be scientist you should now that viruses are also not alive per se. Viruses are a classic twilight area. Are they alive, are they not? It's not an easy answer. However to claim them to be a life form as you do is false.
Re:Trash talking scientist. (Score:5, Interesting)
"Almost no earthly environment is out of bounds for bacteria, including the atmosphere. And while the clouds aren't exactly teeming with life, air-sampling instruments have trapped bacteria more than 11 kilometers above sea level. Carried aloft by rising currents, some microbes can also drift thousands of kilometers before landing. But scientists thought that, like many long-distance travelers, the bugs were inert during their time in the air.
To test whether atmospheric bacteria were inactive, limnologist Birgit Sattler of the University of Innsbruck, Austria, and colleagues collected cloud water from a site 3100 meters up in the Austrian Alps. They kept the samples frozen and analyzed them back in the lab. Once thawed, the cloud bacteria released carbon and slurped up radioactively labeled amino acids and thymidine, an ingredient of DNA, showing that they were metabolizing and reproducing even when on the verge of freezing. That bacteria straight from clouds were active suggests that cloudborne bacteria are as well, the researchers conclude in the 15 January issue of Geophysical Research Letters."
Terrible error on my part. I hope this clears up the gist of my argument, that air itself carries life.
At least here on earth, life will fill any ecosystem it can. Non-native life will adapt to and fill any ecosystem, even ecosystems hostile to life. There is a common house cat killing penguins in antarctica. Bacteria were found outside the mir space station, eating the glass. Sea lampreys will thrive in a fresh water lake 50 degrees warmer than their normal ocean habitat.
We may have already infected Mars, Venus, the Moon and Jupiter with bacteria. How many bacteria must survive to create a viable breeding population? Just One.
Do you have a link? (Score:2)
Do you have a link to more information on that?
Google came up empty for me...
Re:Trash talking scientist. (Score:3, Informative)
Habitablity (Score:3, Interesting)
Why do most people asume that the living conditions on earth are the best model to compare other planets with? For all we know, the conditions here on Earth might be downright horrible for life to develop and we simply just got lucky. (Especially plausible if you think about the conditions we live in; instable tectonic plates, atmospheric disturbances, electro-atmospheric disturbances, oceanic disturbances, etcetera) But that'd going off-topic... There are simply so many things yet unknown and researchers are simply too eager to disregard a complicated subjects for various reasons I'm unfamiliar with...
Re:Habitablity (Score:4, Insightful)
All the conditions you listed off, instable tectonic plates, atmospheric disturbances, etc are all wonderful sources of energy, and most likely helped the formation of life on Earth, rather than hindered it.
Doug
Re:Habitablity (Score:2)
Where did you get that number? AFAIK, 15 billion years is approximately the age of the universe, while the solar system (and the earth) is estimated to be about 4.5 billion years old.
Danger - Charged Words (Score:4, Informative)
The phrase "genetically enhanced" has become an abbreviation of "genes altered through chemical manipulation". All evolution is natural genetic enhancement...even if done selectively by plant breeders who, for example, create large juicy ears of corn from a plant which produced small ears just a short time earlier (and I have no idea how much corn had been altered by pre-Columbus breeders).
Re:Danger - Charged Words (Score:2)
ie. "genetically-enhanced version" implying an Earthly origin or designer.
Bah humbug. (Score:5, Informative)
Please note that the title of the damn paper is not "Merchants of Venus Discovered, Are Selling Us Meat," but, it appears to me to be an optimistic proposal for another venusian probe.
Maybe... (Score:2, Funny)
Genetically enhanced? (Score:5, Funny)
These bacteria might be a genetically-enhanced version of the thermophiles which are known to survive in extreme temperatures
Does this only sound silly to me? They can't be genetically enhanced. If they exist, they're just the way our lord Venus Christ created them!
This can't be good... (Score:2, Funny)
So either the RIAA have set up shop on a new planet, or evolution is starting on Venus, with lawyers...
Swirly thing alert! (Score:2, Funny)
I like the reasoning... (Score:5, Interesting)
These guys come to exactly the same conclusion as I would have given the evidence, and I think the theory is quite sound.
Manned mission to Venus (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Manned mission to Venus (Score:4, Interesting)
Venus provides positive pressure and a positive heat source to work with. The pressure outside and the temperature outside is _greater_ than our standard for living. We know more about dealing with increased pressure (deep-sea research, scuba) environments than reduced pressure ones. We also know how to cool hot temperatures to cool ones with the Carnot cycle. Venus contains complex chemicalls naturally that would be profitable to industry. Best example is sulfuric acid, the #1 most produced industrial chemical in the world. It is generally too complex to be found in significant amounts on the surface of other worlds.
I also believe it may be easy to set up a power station by taking advanage of the high temperatures of the planet to produce energy somehow, but I'm still formulating how to do this.
Publish or Perish (Score:2, Insightful)
Interesting read (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Interesting read (Score:2)
Carl Sagan planned this (Score:5, Interesting)
Could It Be Ours? (Score:2)
Easy way to test this theory (Score:4, Funny)
Science is fun.
Why? (Score:3, Interesting)
We aren't looking for life on other planets, we're looking for life that we understand. Realistically life should occur just about anywhere given enough time (perhaps for actual voids in space, not necessarily what we think of them as, since "black matter" could be negate a "void" in certain areas of space).
I think "life" is merely a self propogating chemical reaction. Evolutionarily wise it makes sense that "chaos" would force mutations. We can easily assume the propogation under all circumstances won't necessarily be the same.
This means that organization of chemicals so that a reaction produces other reactions of the same type would likely be found anywhere that chemicals and or energies can react (remember, we're not just looking for life like our own).
More interestingly it would be interesting to try to create reactions that re-create themselves, and allow them to evolve.
Then again, I don't think we'd get approval for any experiments that wouldn't yield results for possibly billions of years . . . imagine the electric bill.
-Sean
Whatever they do... (Score:2, Funny)
Thermophiles.. (Score:2, Funny)
Logic (Score:2, Insightful)
Comets seeding life (Score:3, Interesting)
After all the extremophiles discovered all over the Earth, it is not too hard to imagine a layer in the atmosphere of Venus where life could thrive.
We know there are microbes that can survive being frozen, and there are some that can survive extreme temperatures and large amounts of radiation too. We've even found a several billion year old microbe captured in a salt crystal in Carlsbad Caverns, and when it was rehydrated, it was alive.
If an even like the one I described could happen, then there are billions and billions of microbes floating around space just waiting to land on some planet that can support life.
Re:There is no life at all there. (Score:5, Funny)
That was Mars (Percival Lowell mapped and counted the canals). Sure, it's confusing, what with them having a capital letter in common, not to mention the same number of letters! Still, they're different. The moon was believed to be made out of cheese and Mars had lots little green men with shovels.
Re:There is no life at all there. (Score:5, Funny)
Dear God, please stop trolling.
thanks.
Irrelevant. (Score:3, Insightful)
This statement makes me very sad. My reply to you is a quotation:
"The dream alone is of interest. What is life without dreams?" - Edmond Rostand
Re:There is no life at all there. (Score:2)
You might very well be proven wrong within your life time. Within the next decades, probes will check out Mars, Venus and Europa. New telescopes will be able to detect planets similar to Earth in distant systems, and even reveal if tell-tale life signs (e.g., atmospheric oxygen) are present.
Tor
Re:There is no life at all there. (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Wont effect me (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Wont effect me (Score:2, Interesting)
We should also try to understand if this is a new phenomina. It sounds like NASA is basically giving up on this discovery already, while activities like the space station are significant I don't honestly see how a few unmanned probes are going to break the bank.