By using this site, you agree to our Privacy Policy and our Terms of Use. Close

Forums - General - 'Life chemical' detected in comet

Source

I was going to post this a few weeks ago but I forgot, better late than never.

'Life chemical' detected in comet

The detection was made in material that came off Comet 81P/Wild-2

Scientists have identified one of the fundamental chemical buildings blocks of life in a comet for the first time, the US space agency (Nasa) reports.

Glycine is an amino acid found in proteins, the sophisticated molecules that organisms use to build and maintain their systems.

It was detected in the material ejected from Comet Wild-2 in 2004 and grabbed by Nasa's Stardust probe.

The idea that life was "seeded" on the early Earth by comets is a popular one.

Many scientists hold to the theory that billions of years ago, a bombardment by these mountainous balls of ice and rock brought important chemical precursors for life to our planet.

Somehow evolution was kick-started from this primordial "soup", they believe.

"The discovery of glycine in a comet supports the idea that the fundamental building blocks of life are prevalent in space, and strengthens the argument that life in the Universe may be common rather than rare," commented Dr Carl Pilcher, who leads Nasa's Astrobiology Institute.

See how Stardust grabbed material from Comet Wild-2

Glycine has been detected in meteorites before and there are also observations in interstellar gas clouds claimed for telescopes, but the Stardust find is described as a first in cometary material.

The Nasa spacecraft flew past the 5km-wide icy Comet 81P/Wild-2 in January 2004.

The probe swept up particles fizzing off the object's surface as it passed some 240km (149 miles) from the comet's core, or nucleus. These tiny grains, just a few thousandths or a millimetre in size, were then returned to Earth in 2006 in a sealed capsule.

Distributed among the world's leading astro-labs, the specimens have since been giving researchers a remarkable insight into the conditions that must have existed in the earliest phases of the Solar System when planets and comets were forming.

Nasa said in a statement that it took sometime for the investigating team, led by Dr Jamie Elsila, to convince itself that the glycine signature found in Stardust's sample bay was genuine and not just Earthly contamination.

Planets being 'seeded' with extraterrestrial material is a popular theory



Around the Network

Bleh, sorry, the rich text editor wont let me alter the HTML so I'm afraid you'll have to read around the errors.



Funny, I had a Biology class last Monday and we talked about how life on Earth probably happened and it was because of meteorites containing exactly this. It's nice to have the actual source though!



Random game thought :
Why is Bionic Commando Rearmed 2 getting so much hate? We finally get a real game and they're not even satisfied... I'm starting to hate the gaming community so f****** much...

Watch my insane gameplay videos on my YouTube page!

I think this is just evidence that the 'building blocks' of life are pervasive and the fact life arose on this planet is neither unique nor special.

It's not evidence for panspermia; we found amino acids can be found on Earth too using only inorganic reactants (hydrogen, ammonia, etc.). Even if it was we're just delaying the problem backwards of how the molecules arranged themselves into functional units that can reproduce, metabolise and evolve.



I saw that a few weeks ago too. I don't necessarily think it PROVES panspermia (at least in the case of earth), but it does at least lend the possibility alot of validity. And really I don't think we'll ever know definitively how the building blocks got started, so at least showing that this is entirely possible removes any doubt that it's IMPOSSIBLE.

Did anybody see that story a few ago about the research on a sort of first step RNA that was shown to develop? I'll see if I can find it, it's an interesting read.



You can find me on facebook as Markus Van Rijn, if you friend me just mention you're from VGchartz and who you are here.

Around the Network

^ I think I may have posted that story about RNA on VGChartz.

I've always liked the idea of panspermia because it could suggest that life in the universe could be fairly common, but I've never read much evidence that supports it. I think I get a little excited when evidence is found that could lead to the formation of a solid hypothesis. Maybe when it comes to science I am a dreamer as opposed to a realist (That doesn't bode well for me does it lol).



Soleron said:
I think this is just evidence that the 'building blocks' of life are pervasive and the fact life arose on this planet is neither unique nor special.

It's not evidence for panspermia; we found amino acids can be found on Earth too using only inorganic reactants (hydrogen, ammonia, etc.). Even if it was we're just delaying the problem backwards of how the molecules arranged themselves into functional units that can reproduce, metabolise and evolve.

Right. Which means Christians will have to make up more shit to keep there bible "correct".

So many things today in the bible, due to science, mean different things to the people who read it then they did when the bible was written.

In a thousand years, it will mean something different to those people.



Well this thread just fell off the radar straight away. Free bump



Celestial Pollination. Nothing new.



Switch: SW-5066-1525-5130

XBL: GratuitousFREEK

Was it an Intelligent Comet?

 



My Mario Kart Wii friend code: 2707-1866-0957