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Space

Swiss Scientists Discover DNA Remains Active After Space Journey and Re-entry 67

Zothecula writes: It may sound like the first chapter of a Quatermass thriller, but scientists from the University of Zurich have discovered that DNA can survive not only a flight through space, but also re-entry into the Earth's atmosphere and still remain active. The findings are based on suborbital rocket flights and could have considerable impact on questions about the origins of life on Earth and the problems of terrestrial space probes contaminating other planets.
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Swiss Scientists Discover DNA Remains Active After Space Journey and Re-entry

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  • by Steve1952 ( 651150 ) on Friday November 28, 2014 @10:18AM (#48479053)
    Finally, after 50+ years of sending astronauts into space, proof that when they return, they will still have their DNA. Send the news to John Glen!
  • [...] the problems of terrestrial space probes contaminating other planets.

    It's not contaminating, it's colonizing.

  • by Progman3K ( 515744 ) on Friday November 28, 2014 @10:35AM (#48479139)

    It may have been sterilized but a seagull can just fly over and poop on it.

    As the rocket speeds out the atmosphere, it must initially flatten lots of bugs against itself.

    How did anyone think we could send anything into space that wasn't crawling with earth-bacteria and other stuff, exactly?

    • in a word... Fairings - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/P... [wikipedia.org]

      The seagull poops on the fairings (if it's even able to get that far, i'm sure they have cannons, falcons, and a lot of other usual bird removal methods at a launchpad, probably more than your average airport), the bugs splatter against the fairings, the actual probe/vessel that was sterilized before putting it into the sealed fairing, will remain sterilized as long as the seals hold. they are removed long before they get to the destination and beco

      • Maybe they can keep birds away, but frogs, not so much [nbcnews.com].

      • Addendum: I don't know if this was mentioned in the article (yay laziness!), but most spacecraft are merely cleaned, not sterilized. Avoiding contamination is important for interplanetary missions, but not so much for something that's going to stay in Earth orbit or burn up in its atmosphere.

      • Thank you for that, fullmetal! I always appreciate it when someone lights the way in front of me!

        In restrospect, I didn't really think about my question because of course, engineers and scientists take multiple precautions. Those precautions may not always be 100% effective but they ARE there.

        Thanks again!

    • It may have been sterilized but a seagull can just fly over and poop on it. As the rocket speeds out the atmosphere, it must initially flatten lots of bugs against itself.

      If you actually read the links, you'll find they applied DNA samples with specific and known markers to the exterior of the vehicle and then tested for DNA with those specific and known markers after it was recovered. Or, not to put too fine a point on it, once again actual scientists actually do know what they're doing, unlike random Sl

    • Because it goes into a hard vaccum, and is fully exposed to the solar wind, ionizing radiation, and all sorts of other radical environmental effects that do a great job at denaturing life?
  • Somebody make a shitty about it that's like a prequel to Aliens but most certainly is not a prequel to Aliens! [a-WINK!]

    Also: mother-fucking space cobras [80s metal guitar riff]!!!

    • by Anonymous Coward

      There already is a prequel to Aliens, it's called Alien... and it was good, Ian Holm was in it, Sigourney Weaver, and like all good prequels, it came before the sequel!

  • by phayes ( 202222 ) on Friday November 28, 2014 @10:57AM (#48479233) Homepage

    So they use a sounding rocket and paint it with a substance including DNA.

    Launch the sounding rocket into a brief experience of no atmosphere & where some parts (but not all) of the rocket are heated to 1000 degrees.

    Then, after recovery, they scrape the paint out of recesses like the screw heads.

    Oh, gee so a brief exposure to no atmosphere, Zero G & no extreme temperatures doesn't destroy DNA? Who'd a thunk it?

    • Well, lots of people since DNA is pretty easy to destroy using a bunsen burner. That said, this isn't all that impressive. Lots of handwaving and little actual instrumentation (did the temperature actually get to 1000 degrees near that screw head or was it protected). It does point out that even naked DNA on something like a meteorite could well survive the entire trip down in a viable conformation.

      That opens lots of possibilities such as panspermia [wikipedia.org].

      • by phayes ( 202222 )

        Precisely. Nothing in their test is new or surprising. We've known for decades that DNA can survive the environment in space and sheltered nooks on a sounding rocket gives no info on how meteorites moving much faster prove anything about panspermia.

        Junk science/reporting...

  • Surviving the estimated 1000 degree centigrade reentry temperature is impressive. The rest of the test - a suborbital flight of 780 seconds - is less so. But I would have expected the seconds of heat to be more deadly to the DNA than light years of cold, so it's still interesting.
  • Radiation? (Score:4, Interesting)

    by fullmetal55 ( 698310 ) on Friday November 28, 2014 @11:10AM (#48479305)

    since it's a suborbital flight, that doesn't say much about deep space. sending it on a trip around the moon would be a better test. at least get out of the Van Allen belts and get into the cosmic radiation, before you can see if it actually does survive a trip through space.

  • One day we'll find the answer [youtube.com]...

  • DNA can survive not only a flight through space, but also re-entry into the Earth's atmosphere and still remain active.

    We've known this since 1961 [wikipedia.org]! Okay, it was well wrapped in meat and metal, but still.

  • How do you think it got here?
  • Yet another fact to support panspermia [wikipedia.org].

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