Molecular Basis for Life Found on Extrasolar Planet 89
DarkProphet writes "NASA scientists have discovered the first evidence of organic molecules on an extrasolar planet. Using the Hubble Space Telescope, they detected trace amounts of methane on a swirling gas giant about 63 light-years from our own planet. Being a gas giant, there's almost no chance this discovery represents extrasolar life. A unique find, just the same. 'HD 189733b, a so-called "hot Jupiter," located 63 light years away, has proven a boon for scientists studying exoplanets. Its large size and proximity to its star mean that it dims the star's light more than any other known exoplanet. Combine that with its home star's high brightness, and scientists find that the system creates the best viewing conditions of any known extrasolar system. At different wavelengths, every atom and molecule has its own telltale footprint, so scientists can convert what are known as absorption spectra into the chemical composition of the object they're looking at.'"
I'm not surprised... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Methane - Big Deal (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Methane - Big Deal (Score:5, Insightful)
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You know, Urectum does have a nice ring to it
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FRY: "Oh. What's it called now?"
FARNSWORTH: "Urectum."
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[yes, it's a sad boring day when I post simply to use the word "Icelandii" and poke fun of the Iceland/Greenland battle for identity all in one sentence.]
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I bet you thought I was going to make a Futurama reference, didn't you?
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What's wrong with that name ?
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Well... (Score:3, Funny)
Actually it would be pretty cool to establish contact with an alien civilization even if there is a 250 year lag. Just ask a question and your great-great-great-grandchildren might get an answer, "No we haven't developed hyperlightspeed propulsion yet either".
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Re:Well... (Score:5, Funny)
Well, we know you don't use email. An email user would not expect the first communication to be "Hello there" or "Hello world", an email user would expect:
Lagos, Nigeria, Earth.
Attention: The President/CEO
Dear Sir,
CONFIDENTIAL BUSINESS PROPOSAL
Having consulted with my colleagues and based on the information gathered from the nigerian chambers of commerce and industry, I have the privilege to request for your assistance to transfer the sum of
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64 bytes from 194.109.192.166: icmp_seq=1 ttl=128 time=3910464584102.499 ms
--- 194.109.192.166 ping statistics ---
1 packets transmitted, 1 received, 0% packet loss, time 3910464584102.499ms
Is this really unexpected? (Score:2)
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I've heard many times of the extraordinary odds against life even existing in the universe. Yet, here we are and some still try to prove that it's impossible for themselves to exist. It's unfortunate that life is likely so prevalent in the universe but really really difficult to bridge the gap and make contact, even at the speed of light.
If you believe in evolution then, yes, the odds are basically more than astronomical and applying those odds to another place in the universe and expecting something to evolve again is just ludicrous. I think my sig applies very well in this regard. If life didn't begin evolving more than once (i.e. 2+ origins of life) on Earth where, if you think like an evolutionist, the conditions are supposedly perfect then it has less of a chance (if that is even possible to be less than it already was for Earth) of
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Regarding your sig, isn't every species essentially a different evolutionary tract in a varying stage? If not, what would qualify for your criteria of being different? Silicon-based lifeforms?
I don't mean the basis for the life form (carbon vs silicon vs whatever) but the origin. What I mean is why aren't there multiple parallel tracts having *different* origins? The tracts that supposedly exist are all based on a single organic origin (where ever that was), not multiple, therefore evolution only kicked into gear once (with not even a sign of any failings to suggest multiple tries but with only a single success). So if evolution is possible and if we are here because it occurred once already t
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That ones easy, "life" (ie collections of reproducing molecules) developed once somehow and then out competed all later/other types of life for resources. I mean some little molecule thats something near alive can form in this room right now but its not gunna get enough "food" because me and my bacteria friends are going to be far better at getting, keeping, and utilizing those resources. Thats the nontechnical answer.
And do you have proof of this easy answer? The problem is somewhere a little molecule that *is* alive can form somewhere and it *does* get enough food. Bacteria mutate into other types of bacteria all the time *and* they survive to wreak havoc for people who create antibiotics for reach strain so what is so different about life forms originating out of the soup multiple times many years ago? You aren't consistent.
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Wasn't it already posted on Slashdot? (Score:1)
Wasn't it already posted on Slashdot a while ago?
http://science.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=08/02/12/1414257 [slashdot.org]just to highlight (Score:5, Informative)
the planet in question is bigger than Jupiter and closer to its sun than mercury, so its way too hot for any life "as we know it" to survive
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Been over this before (Score:5, Funny)
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Meh, no jokes from me. Your comment has left my humor deflated.
Headline is misleading (Score:5, Informative)
Here's a quote from one of the workers:
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Here is the abstract [nature.com].
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Same old hype (Score:3, Interesting)
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Of course, the wack-jobs believe this already happened, and the government is keeping it a secret. That's for another day...
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please, speak for yourself, there's a myriad of biologists that'd like to disagree with this assessment. we have a pretty good idea about what exactly life is, unless you're still stuck in the days of vitalism or whatever
Now, oxygen, on the other hand... (Score:5, Interesting)
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Ooops... (Score:2)
Re:Now, oxygen, on the other hand... (Score:5, Interesting)
Liquid water is the smoking gun for life forms, and maybe some serious carbon.
Re:Now, oxygen, on the other hand... (Score:4, Informative)
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What an amazing ego...mod parent down. (Score:2)
How does this stuff get modded up in the first place?
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The first lifeforms on our own planet didn't use O2 for respiration. It took a very, very, very long time for the Earth's original atmosphere to be converted to the 70% nitrogen, 20% oxygen atmosphere we're comfortable breathing now. Even today we have a very popular organism that doesn't require O2 to function, and the wonderful result of lacking O2 is ethanol.
I assume when you say "very, very, very long time" you mean millions or billions of years. The problem is that various geological (surface and sub-surface) formations show quick, catastrophic development (erosion specifically) measured over periods of days or months, not slow erosion measured over billions of years.
Coal seams, which are always flat, also indicate rapid (days/months) development. In that case the rapid development prevented slow erosion over billions of years from ever taking place which
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Dup (Score:1, Redundant)
No chance?!? (Score:1)
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considering how regularly we find life in places our usual view of where life can survive don't work, like around geothermal vents at the bottom of the ocean, or inside solid rock 2 miles below the surface, I find this comment incredibly narrow-minded. That gas giant is about on keel with the ocean here on earth, and last I checked, life here began in the seas.
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Note that some of Jupiter's chemicals may be biology-produced. We just don't know at this stage. If bacteria can live in Earth's atmosphere, then it can probably live in Jupiter's. There are a variety of temperatures in Jupiter's atmosphere; the further you go down, the warmer it gets. This
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I suppose what I'm saying comes down to just this: to say that any location is inhospitable to life, is a mistake which the dice will eventually beat you at. Just to have genesis from nothing at all to begin wit
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I'm sure there's good science involved, I'm just curious to know what it is.
Re:Hydrogues (Score:5, Informative)
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nothing unusual about methane (Score:2)
um, no. Methane is found in atmospheres of -stars- (Score:1)
Re:What's the big deal? - Ah! But you're assuming (Score:3, Funny)
How to polarize your scientific audience... (Score:2)
"We found methane gas..." => "Molecular basis for life..."?
Political double-speak is the cause of the polarization problem in communicating science, not the solution.
How about just sticking with "We can detect methane gas on an extra-solar planet"? Isn't that cool enough by itself? Nobody on either side of the debate has problems with repeatable observations. But instead, every discovery is used as a club to beat the Big Bang or Evolution over the head of creationists, whether it has anything to d
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The motivation is simple sensationalism, molecules of life sounds cooler than methane, thats it.
Now go home and well call you when some redneck school board bans evolution teaching, then you can
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That's not true at all (Score:2)
Clearly life in the universe exists, Us. There is no reason, religious or otherwise that life can't exist elsewhere. Only closed minded fools.
Why that site is crap.
Here is one example:
"The story we have all heard from movies, television, newspapers, and most magazines and textbooks is that dinosaurs lived millions of years ago. According to evolutionists, the dinosaurs 'ruled the Earth' for 140 million years, dying out about 65 million years ago. However, scie
Interstellar methane ?? (Score:2)
Maybe this is too much of a leap... (Score:2)
They should adjust their filters to look for those telltale footprints, too.
Light Years (Score:1)