Falmer, Brighton BN1 9QJ
from
AstroSciences Website
The discovery of evidence for life on Earth more than 3850 million years ago (1) naturally encourages a revival of speculation about the possibility that life did not originate on Earth, but was carried to the planet in the form of microorganisms such as bacteria, either by natural processes or deliberate seeding of the Galaxy by intelligent beings.
This idea, known as panspermia, has a long history (2, 3), but it is curious that in recent decades astronomers have tended to dismiss the possibility of panspermia on the grounds that microorganisms could not survive the damage caused by ultraviolet radiation and cosmic rays on their journey out of a planetary system like the Solar System (4) while some biologists (5) have argued that it is impossible for life to have emerged from simple molecules in the limited time available (now seen to be substantially less than 1000 million years) since the Earth formed.
This has led Crick, in particular, to argue that the seeds of life were indeed carried to Earth (and presumably other planets) protected inside automated space-probes, a process he calls directed panspermia (6).
The problem is that although microorganisms could escape from the Earth today, their biological molecules would quickly be destroyed by radiation in the near-Earth environment.
Bacteria shielded inside fine grains of material such as carbon could survive in the interplanetary environment near Earth, but would then be too heavy for the radiation pressure of the Sun today to eject them from the Solar System.
The solution is to argue that suitably shielded microorganisms can be ejected from a planetary system like ours when the star is in its red giant phase.
But the work of Wesson and his colleagues naturally leads one to surmise that the immediate fate of the microorganisms ejected from a planetary system during the red giant phase will be to mingle with the other material ejected from the star, forming part of the material of interstellar space and becoming part of an interstellar molecular cloud.
When a new planetary system forms from such a cloud, it is likely that the accretion processes in the circumstellar disc produce very large numbers of cometary bodies, which preserve intact the material of the cloud. Although the processes of accretion of a planet like the Earth generate heat which would destroy any microorganisms present (and which may well have driven of all the primordial volatiles), it is likely that as the planet cools it will be bombarded by comets containing large amounts of primordial material (and water) down to the surface (for a review, see 11) .
If this material includes dormant bacteria, or even fragments of DNA, life will be able to get a grip on the planet as soon as its surface cools, as seems to have happened on Earth.
It is difficult to see how material in this form could have become a general feature of the interstellar medium, or, indeed, how it would get in to comets.
What I propose here, in the light of the work of Wesson and his colleagues, is that organic material is not only a natural and widely dispersed component of the interstellar medium, but will inevitably be incorporated into the material from which new planets form.
If the hypothesis is
correct, there should be biological material very similar to that of
life on Earth in these comets
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