Ingredients of Life Found Around Sun-Like Star 366
smooth wombat writes "NASAs Spitzer Space Telescope has detected the basic organic building blocks of life in a ring orbiting in the 'habitable zone', that area where Earth orbits the Sun and where water exists on the borderline between gas and liquid, in a nearby stellar nursery. When acetylene and hydrogen cyanide combine with water they form adenine, one of the four bases of DNA. The detection supports the widely held theory that many of the molecular building blocks of life were present in the solar system even before planets formed, thus assisting the initial formation of complex organic molecules and the start of life itself." Though it was a little shakier than this observation, we've discussed the possibility of life elsewhere in the galaxy before.
Ingredients of Life Found Around Sun-Like Star (Score:5, Funny)
Love,
Kansas Board of Education
Re:Ingredients of Life Found Around Sun-Like Star (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Ingredients of Life Found Around Sun-Like Star (Score:5, Funny)
Is that just me?
Re:Ingredients of Life Found Around Sun-Like Star (Score:3)
it should interest you, because it is bad science. regardless of your beliefs.
"Is that just me?"
no, now I want some pasta with red sauce...I'm going to lunch.
Re:Ingredients of Life Found Around Sun-Like Star (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Ingredients of Life Found Around Sun-Like Star (Score:5, Insightful)
Funny thing is, whenever I ask a "why" question, regarding the origins of life, God's intentions, etc, to one who professes that religion contains all the answers, the answer I typically get when my questions get deep enough is always along the lines of "we cannot profess to know or understand the motive of God and His infinite wisdom; for to do so would be to place ourselves on His level. We must only have faith in His divine plan." Doesn't seem to answer much of anything, in my opinion.
42 purple monkey dishwashers!
Re:Ingredients of Life Found Around Sun-Like Star (Score:3, Interesting)
Therefore a deity could be an intelligent designer of the universe. I don't see any more or less proof for that then the big bang theory
Disclaimer: I do not believe in a supreme being.
Re:Ingredients of Life Found Around Sun-Like Star (Score:4, Insightful)
The possibility of gods existing is not concidered by science since the question is one of religeon or philosohpy, not science.
Re:Ingredients of Life Found Around Sun-Like Star (Score:3, Interesting)
Why are some people incapable of believing that the universe could be infinite in both "directions" of time--that is, capable of always having existed--and then turn around and in the same breath be capable of believing that a noncorporeal, intelligent and benevolent entity could?
Not saying you are such a person. Just that this obvious disconnect of reason baffles me.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Ingredients of Life Found Around Sun-Like Star (Score:5, Insightful)
Why presume that there are things that science not only doesn't know, but can't? Who's to say that in the future it will always be impossible for us to figure out what was before the Big Bang? As we know it now, no, we don't know what may have been before, but that's why we continue on attempting to discover and learn. We may end up discovering some as-of-yet unknown fundamental principle of reality that illuminates the very questions that we think are unanswerable. Or that quantum mechanics only appears random and probablistic because we currently lack the ability to probe where we need to be able to figure it out, but in the future we may discover how to do it. Making up an answer of "God did it and that's all we need to know so stop asking" helps exactly nothing.
Live long and prosper.
Re:Ingredients of Life Found Around Sun-Like Star (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Ingredients of Life Found Around Sun-Like Star (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Ingredients of Life Found Around Sun-Like Star (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Ingredients of Life Found Around Sun-Like Star (Score:3, Funny)
Our Motto: Ignorance is Relative
Re:Ingredients of Life Found Around Sun-Like Star (Score:2)
Re:Ingredients of Life Found Around Sun-Like Star (Score:2)
Maybe. (Score:2)
But it's a common violation of scientific principles to assume that the conditions we see now are those that have always existed. It makes for neater theories, but counterexamples are ubiquitous.
The FA merely suggests that DNA components could form in spac
Re:Ingredients of Life Found Around Sun-Like Star (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Ingredients of Life Found Around Sun-Like Star (Score:2)
Intelligent Design (Score:5, Funny)
I think I'm desperate for entertainment... (Score:3, Funny)
Nah it's just... (Score:2)
Re:Nah it's just... (Score:2)
Re:It's all in Xenu! (Score:4, Funny)
Where to send the checks?
Re:Intelligent Design (Score:4, Insightful)
Actually, since they are billions of light-years away, they just noticed last week.
In other news (Score:5, Funny)
Re:In other news (Score:2)
W1n!
So far, you've made the only insightful observation on TFA in the entire thread.
It was never in doubt that we would see other planets with acetylene, hydrogen cyanide, and liquid water, if we looked long enough. Finding an example of such a planet doesn't mean there's anybody there to add to our AIM buddy lists.
Re:In other news (Score:4, Interesting)
First came RNA, which combines the catalytic properties of proteins and the hereditary properties of DNA in a single molecule. So RNA can provide a template for new RNA (by base complimentarity) and also catalyse the polymerization of RNA onto itself. The odds of randomly assembling such an RNA are of course excruciatingly low - but we have a hundred million years and many, many RNA polymers floating around during that period. Furthermore, if we were on a planet where this had never occurred - would we be here to talk about it?
RNA molecules form spontaneously in conditions like those on the early earth, given the right organic ingredients (i.e. in the presence of the molecules we see in that gas cloud, if they were on a planetary surface).
Phospholipids (or other molecules, with similar charge properties) also form spontaneously, and arrange spontaneously into lipid bilayers.
Since these lipid bilayers would have a strong tendency to concentrate whatever was in them when they floated away, the insides of these lipid bilayers would be ideal locations for these self-replicating RNA to congregate. I will refer to these proto-cells as "collectives of RNA molecules".
Over time, these RNA molecules evolve new catalytic activities. It has been well established - in experimental studies - that randomly varied RNA can, indeed, evolve new catalytic activities. It takes a while, but we've got an aeon to burn.
Three new RNA activities are key:
a) Creating a "template" version of themselves/eachother consisting of DNA, rather than RNA. This will eventually become the inherited genome - but originally, this would confer a selective advantage because DNA molecules are more stable than RNA. Even today, no organism can synthesize DNA without first synthesizing a little RNA as a "primer" to get synthesis started.
b) Making proteins as an aid to catalysis. The first proteins were probably non-informative polymers (like starch). Most likely, they served as bound cofactors (like heme iron in hemoglobin) and the like for RNA enzymes. Since proteins are almost universally superior catalysts to RNA, the first collective of RNA that had the ability to synthesize protein would have a great advantage. Even today, the fundamental reaction of protein synthesis is catalyzed by the RNA component of the Ribozome, although modern Ribozomes have a great many proteins that "help" the process.
c) Synthesising additional phospholipids to make more membrane. As time goes on and the amount of free phospholipid floating in the water declines, this becomes a great selective advantage to any proto-cell, since it can reproduce more proto-cells limited only by available energy and reduced carbon.
With these three - perfectly understandable - adaptations, you have evolved from a soap bubble full of RNA into a cell.
---
Obviously, this story need not be true, and there are many details missing (or incorrect.) At the moment, however, it is the best explanation we have, and it is certainly possible.
Dupe?! (Score:4, Funny)
Oh, so you've bourght us another dupe, huh? Well, thanks, Slashdot mods, thanks! FOR NOTHING!
Re:Dupe?! (Score:2)
Re:Dupe?! (Score:2)
Wait - so Moby had it right? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Wait - so Moby had it right? (Score:2)
Re:Wait - so Moby had it right? (Score:3, Informative)
Woodstock - CSNY
Re:Wait - so Moby had it right? (Score:2)
Though, just to start a potentially off topic thread which will (as many off topic threads do) end in flame wars and tears, I think the actual line was 'we are caught in the devil's bargain'.
Re:Wait - so Moby had it right? (Score:2, Funny)
Made of star stuff (Score:2)
Re:Wait - so Moby had it right? (Score:3, Informative)
In short, yes. [talkorigins.org]
Re:Wait - so Moby had it right? (Score:2)
The Big Bang produced very little but hydrogen and helium, with some lithium (Thielemann et al. 2001). Various other elements (heavier than carbon but lighter than iron) are produced by fusion in the red giant stage of stars (Table 3).
S
Re:Wait - so Moby had it right? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Wait - so Moby had it right? (Score:3, Informative)
You are
Re:Wait - so Moby had it right? (Score:2)
It's N14 the cosmic rays interact with, not C12.
Carbon Dating (Score:4, Informative)
Because it has a relatively constant abundance in nature, living things should also maintain the same ratio of carbon-12 to carbon-14 in their tissues... until they die, at which point they're no longer taking in new carbon from the environment. Then the carbon-14 starts to decay (with a half-life of ~5700 years), but the carbon-12, which is stable, remains. Measuring this ratio can give an approximation of the length of time since the creature died.
The carbon-12 in your body is stable, and could very well pre-date the solar system. Carbon-14 doesn't hang around very long, in astronomical timescales.
Re:Wait - so Moby had it right? (Score:4, Interesting)
Actually, even the bible tells us this is so. "Ashes to ashes... dust to dust...".
Could interpret this literally and say that we (the Sun, Earth and life on it) are made from interstellar dust initially, and that's where we end up when the solar system ends its life and turns back to ashes and dust when the sun explodes.
Re:Wait - so Moby had it right? (Score:2)
It came from a Book of Common Prayers and is based on Genesis 3:19:
By the sweat of your brow
you will eat your food
until you return to the ground,
since from it you were taken;
for dust you are
and to dust you will return
Drake equation (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Drake equation (Score:2)
Re:Drake equation (Score:2, Informative)
Too bad we're talking about very simple molecule formation here, or they would really be on to something. Adenine is just a relatively easy-to-form glob of hydrogen and nitrogen.
Wiki has a map of the molecule in question, if you are curious. [wikipedia.org]
Re:Drake equation (Score:2, Informative)
adenine is not complex (Score:3, Interesting)
It isn't really the step from the simplest of molecules, like water, to slightly more complex molecules, like amino acids, which is the problem. Experiments starting with Stanley Miller's have shown this is an easy step.
Very likely the tricky step is forming an enclosed system in which information is passed back and forth from som
Re:adenine is not complex (Score:3, Interesting)
Wow, artists rule. (Score:2)
Since they took care of the latter half of the article, I figure I'll cover for the former.
Here is an ASCII artist's impression of what the organic material might look like, circling that sun-like star!
DNA in space? (Score:5, Interesting)
I think the current popular theory, IIRC, is that RNA molecules somehow stack up in a tidal pool, where they are gently rocked back and forth. Some correct me please.
So how hard would it be to get DNA to link up in microgravity? Sure, there's more radiation around to blast things apart, but that might be a good thing -- you could get molecules you might not get otherwise without the blowing apart. Also, in microgravity, molecules can float around in 3 dimensions.
That's a lot to get from an artist's impression! (Score:2)
oh... you were inspired.
*runs off*
Re:DNA in space? (Score:2)
(Honestly, once you've dismissed the creationism/ID crowd and declared that there must be some scientific explanation for life, it remains that the current theories deman
Re:DNA in space? (Score:5, Insightful)
They worked out the probabilities for life as we know it occuring randomly - they were small per trial however you must apply the Law of Extremely Large Numbers - ie a huge ammount of trials. Turns out the number of stars likely to have planets in the habital zone overwhelmed the probability by about 10,000 planets likely to have life of some form.
Don't try to fathom real world probabilities in terms of serial trials of flipping a coin.
Re:DNA in space? (Score:2, Flamebait)
That's precisely my point -- once you're in the realm of multiplying an insanely large number pulled out of your ass by an insanely small number pulled out of your ass, it's arguably irrelevant that the number the OP is pulling out of his ass is even smaller.
Occam's Razor went by the boards long ago on this front, for the reasons you say.
Re:DNA in space? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:DNA in space? (Score:4, Funny)
IIRC, that was one of the speed settings on the Heart of Gold's throttle lever.
Re:DNA in space? (Score:2)
Re:DNA in space? (Score:5, Informative)
Second, tidal pools on a planet keep everything nicely together in the same general area, courtesey of Our Friend Gravity. Tidal pools, at least on Earth, also provide a very necessary solvent for the whole organic chemistry process -- water. No water, and pretty much all of the organic processes that we know about stop working; in fact, when you look at the chemistry, it almost seems that an oxygen atmosphere is optional, but that water is a base requiremet for life because of its properties as a solvent.
So, no, it's doubtful that complex molecules like Keith Richards will form outside of a suitable gravity well, and doubly doubtful that complex organic molecules (e.g., DNA) will form without liquid water.
[1] That's a magnetic field around a planet, not a hamster ball for Sir Ian McKellen.
Re:DNA in space? (Score:4, Informative)
In fact, Earth's atmostphere originally had no oxygen, until the first anaerobic microbes began producting oxygen as a by-product of their metabolism.
Re:DNA in space? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:DNA in space? (Score:3, Interesting)
I agree that the anaerobic formation of life is a more plausible scenario, given how utterly caustic oxygen is (thanks to its valence electron configuration).
However, given the dependence of organic molecules on that particular atom with atomic weight sixteen, I t
Re:DNA in space? (Score:2, Informative)
They can do the same in water. However, one of the problems with trying to get organic chemicals in microgravity is that the cloud in which they're supposed to originate is very sparse. Thus, spontaneous creat
After further consideration... (Score:4, Interesting)
The detection supports the widely held theory that many of the molecular building blocks of life were present in the solar system even before planets formed, thus assisting the initial formation of complex organic molecules and the start of life itself.
"""
Wait, so finding organic molecules around a planet supports this how? Can we tell the age of those particles, or that stellar nursery? If we are to believe a lightning strike can create life from amino acids and things of this nature... why would this support that conclusion in particular?
Maybe I'm missing the point. Perhaps someone can explain things to me?
Re:After further consideration... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:After further consideration... (Score:2)
Re:After further consideration... (Score:2, Insightful)
Why mention something weakly supported? (Score:2, Insightful)
That's like saying that because some unknown substance glows, it supports that it is radioactive, because other radioactive things glow.
It also supports that it is a lightbulb.
And also that it is hot...
*taps the subject*
Re:Why mention something weakly supported? (Score:2)
Actually, this situation is more like saying we have a theory that radioactive substances glow, and we find a glowing radioactive substance.
Guess I'm just I'm too skeptical... (Score:2)
Practical space technology and findings interest me, but stuff like this... not so much. We'll get there, sure, we'll figure it out... and this kind of almost wild speculation, as it seems to me, might make good science fiction, but I'll stick to what we can test and prove.
Do
Re:Guess I'm just I'm too skeptical... (Score:2, Insightful)
As far as observing this process in actions, it is only a matter of finding planets at the various stages of the process and observing the expected chemical reactions. This will be easier as our ability to make the observations improves.
In fact we are performing th
The universe is too big, old bean! (Score:2)
One (or even ten) cases will still lend only weak support, given this aforementioned 'scope of the universe'...
Do you see what I am saying?
Re:The universe is too big, old bean! (Score:2)
If you observe the process occuring it is a way of proving it. Just like we can prove that supernovas happen by observing one happen even if we can't induce a supernova in a labratory.
Scope! Ze scope! (Score:2)
Anyway, that's all I have to say on the thread (barring any drastically new developments)
Re:Scope! Ze scope! (Score:2)
In any case, it is only a matter of waiting for the results.
Re:Guess I'm just I'm too skeptical... (Score:2)
WTF? We aren't physically flying around the universe like Buck Rogers when we do it, but we do "run tests on the past" just by performing spectroscopic analysis on light from distant sources.
Re:Why mention something weakly supported? (Score:2)
The theory of organic matter being present before planet formation, however, is larger in scope than a single element. The whole universe, which we can't even figure out where it ends, if it ends, if it is expanding, if so, how fast, etc... so it could very well be an ever-widening scope... potentially infinite elem
Re:After further consideration... (Score:2)
Just because it's possible that the theory is not true in all cases, this certainly supports that the theory is true in at least some cases.
Re:After further consideration... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:After further consideration... (Score:4, Insightful)
Life Around Other Stars (Score:3, Informative)
Food Network... (Score:2)
Life is software, not hardware (Score:5, Interesting)
Some issues (Score:2)
Factor into this that single cell "life" began on this planet almo
Re:Some issues (Score:4, Informative)
Our detection methods slant towards larger planets, definitely. But the fact that most of those large planets are in highly eccentric orbits or close to their stars has nothing to do with the detection method. It appears to be the predominate result of solar system formation. Ours appears to be the exception, not the rule.
Our detection methods could find Jupiter like planets in Jupiter like orbits, and they do. They're just few and far between.
ingredients for life (Score:5, Funny)
When asked about the ingredients for Life, Ss's'krpwjdnq waved his third-dimension-bound tentacles wildly and secreted an information packed protein strand. While there is no English equivalent for his communique, a rough translation would be "Given the chance to eat a human, I would."
Re:ingredients for life...what about the Wine? (Score:2)
So? Quaker Oats has know for years ... (Score:4, Funny)
The ingredients of Life [lifecereal.com].
Sure as hell don't have to go that far out to get it - local supermarket has it!
It is agreed in all probability (Score:4, Interesting)
1. Gravity of at least 0.4 G is a requirement (micro-gravity need not apply here as a recent ISS scientific experiement shown with regard to catalyst of acytelene/water/hydrogen under electric sparks/shocks)
2. Swirling motions (tidal pool is nature's best liquid/air agitators)
3. Minimal radiation (asinine will not remain cohesive for long under gamma bombardments)
This means a heavy shielding must be in place, which means dense air and/or planet
4. Lightning... the very most improbable of all aspect of the building block starter. It's gotta strike at the right place and the right time, preferably near the tidal pool.
I'd gotta hand it to mother nature and God, we are one lucky fools on this unqiue planet, Earth.
Re:"the borderline between gas and liquid" (Score:5, Informative)
No. Liquid water doesn't exist at the temp and pressure where there is a borderline between gas and solid, you get direct sublimation from solid to gas under those conditions -- unless you happen to be at exactly the triple point.
Conversion between gas and liquid would help in the formation of life precursors, since the phase changes could help concentrate compounds in acqueous solution, resulting in greater rates of reaction. I'm sure there are other reasons why acqueous phase changes would help formation of complex organic molecules.
Or Dirk Diggler's... (Score:2)
Re:tis the season (Score:3, Informative)
I suggest you look into two of his books, "3:16 Bible Texts Illuminated" and "Things a Computer Scientist Rarely Talks About".
He gave some lectures [ddj.com] about how he wrote "3:16", his motivations for doing so, and various thoughts about God. These lectures were the basis for "Things a Computer Scientist Ra
Re:Complexity of DNA (Score:2)
Re:Complexity of DNA (Score:4, Insightful)
I think what some of the posters here fail to understand is the entire thing with :
infinite time
infinite space
infinite possibilities
given those variables, I think it is entirely possible that we might be more "normal" than one would think considering we are made up of the this stuff and the fact that these things have a tendency to fall into place in certain ways naturally.
I actually think it is an thought-cop-out to just declare a "designer" did something instead of coming to grips with the idea of trillions and trillions of stars and infinity.
Re:Complexity of DNA (Score:3, Informative)
No it's not. The total length of the DNA in a human is probably less than a thousandth of this. The total length of unique DNA is probably of the order of a few meters in length, the rest is copies.
have to? There is no law of biology that says anything of the sort. A protein is merely a long sequence of peptides
Re:statistical black hole (Score:4, Insightful)
No one has ever suggested that a fully formed human chromosome could just pop into existance out of constituant elements. Your example is a straw man.
No explanation has yet been demonstrated of how the initial
chemical constituents formed to produce a DNA/RNA based life form.....No, a lightning strike/spark on an early 1950's high scholl science project that produces some organic slime is not the same thing.
Yes it danm well is, sunshine. That experiment proved that these elements, amino acids etc, were almost guaranteed to have existed in abundance in the early earth. These elements ARE the building blocks of life.
Take a look a a model where a soup of these elements exists, add in factors, look at the probabilites, then multiply by the collasal timescales and particle counts involved and you'll quickly realise that not only was it likely that life evolved out of slime or pools around geysters, it was practically inevitable.
Go back to Kansas and take last years flu vaccine, and go pray to whatever straw man is up there in the sky. We'll be over here in the Age of the Enlightenment if you'd care to join us.
Re:statistical black hole (Score:4, Interesting)
Life can start simple. A single molecule that reacts with other molecules around it and makes imperfect copies of itself is enough. Given time, all suitable molecules will be used and live, even if primitive, will be everywhere.
Since the copies are not perfect, mutation does happen and you will have a lot of different "copiers" in your soup, some better that the others, some building more complex structures that can, in turn, copy themselves.
I agree with you. Expecting cell based lifeforms in the first week of a biosphere is ludicrous, but you are wrong. Cells, nuclei and DNA are only one way of life to express itself. It happens to be the way we know because once a certain kind of life dominates, there is little space left for other forms. It happened here.
There are sure other forms of organization that happened all over the place. Remember: billions of places over billions of years make a lot of attemps on life.