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TOPIC: Alien life


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Planetary habitability
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A new study by the University of Puerto Rico at Arecibo shows the first quantitative evaluation of planetary habitability. The study identifies some potential habitats in the solar system and also shows how the habitability of our planet has changed in the past, with some periods being even better than today.
Abel Mendez presented his results on Monday, October 5, at the 41st Annual Meeting of the Division for Planetary Sciences of the American Astronomical Society in Fajardo, Puerto Rico.

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The Hunt for Extraterrestrial Life Gets Weird
In the search for extraterrestrial life, some scientists say we're focusing too much on finding signs of existence as we know it, and in the process, we may be missing more strange forms of life that don't rely on water or carbon metabolism.
Now researchers from Austria have started a systematic study of solvents other than water that might be able to support life outside our planet. They're hoping their research will lead to a shift in what they call the "geocentric mindset" of our attempts to detect extraterrestrial life.

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EPSC09/17: Exotic life beyond Earth? Looking for life as we don't know it
Scientists at a new interdisciplinary research institute in Austria are working to uncover how life might evolve with 'exotic' biochemistry and solvents, such as sulphuric acid instead of water. Their research was presented at the European Planetary Science Congress in Potsdam by Dr Johannes Leitner on Friday 18 September.
The University of Vienna established a research group for Alternative Solvents as a Basis for Life Supporting Zones in (Exo-)Planetary Systems in May 2009, under the leadership of Maria Firneis.
Traditionally, planets that might sustain life are looked for in the 'habitable zone,' the region around a star in which Earth-like planets with carbon dioxide, water vapour and nitrogen atmospheres could maintain liquid water on their surfaces. Consequently, scientists have been looking for biomarkers produced by extraterrestrial life with metabolisms resembling the terrestrial ones, where water is used as a solvent and the building blocks of life, amino acids, are based on carbon and oxygen. However, these may not be the only conditions under which life could evolve.
One requirement for a life-supporting solvent is that it remains liquid over a large temperature range. Water is liquid between 0 C and 100 C, but other solvents exist which are liquid over more than 200 C. Such a solvent would allow an ocean on a planet closer to the central star. The reverse scenario is also possible. A liquid ocean of ammonia could exist much further from a star. Furthermore, sulphuric acid can be found within the cloud layers of Venus and we now know that lakes of methane/ethane cover parts of the surface of the Saturnian satellite Titan.
Consequently, the discussion on potential life and the best strategies for its detection is ongoing and not only limited to exoplanets and habitable zones. The newly established research group at the University of Vienna, together with international collaborators, will investigate the properties of a range of solvents other than water, including their abundance in space, thermal and biochemical characteristics as well as their ability to support the origin and evolution of life supporting metabolisms.

Source: European Planetology Network

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In a paper published in Environmental Microbiology, Dr. Anna Gorbushina (Carl-von-Ossietzky University, Oldenburg, Germany), Professor William Broughton (University of Geneva, Switzerland) and their colleagues analysed dust samples collected by Charles Darwin and others almost 200 years ago.
Recent space-centric studies have shown that some rock-inhabiting organisms, known as "endoliths," might be able to survive a trip through space and a plunge through a planet's atmosphere to the surface. However, nobody knew whether these organisms could survive the initial trip into space.


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Critique on Vindication of Panspermia

Mumbai scientist challenges bacteria theory

A young Mumbai scientist claims to have disproved a theory that living bacteria from space called 'Cometary Panspermia' could have led to the origin and spread of diseases like SARS (Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome) that ravaged many countries in early 2000.

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Fetched from a faraway comet, distinctive amino acids
In the vapours surrounding a comet millions of miles away, scientists claim to have found amino acids - one of the basic building blocks of life.
The find came from a mission called Stardust - the first since Apollo 17 more than 30 years ago to return a sample of anything from space. The Stardust craft was launched in 1999, and got within a few miles of its target, a comet called Wild 2, in 2004.


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Are we alone?
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On the 50th anniversary of NASA, Stephen Hawking , Newton's heir as the Lucasian Professor of Mathematics at the University of Cambridge, was asked the question, "Are we alone?" His answer was short and simple; "probably not".

Source dailygalaxy

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Inorganic living matter
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Title: From plasma crystals and helical structures towards inorganic living matter
Authors: V N Tsytovich, G E Morfill, V E Fortov, N G Gusein-Zade, B A Klumov and S V Vladimirov

Complex plasmas may naturally self-organise themselves into stable interacting helical structures that exhibit features normally attributed to organic living matter. The self-organisation is based on non-trivial physical mechanisms of plasma interactions involving over-screening of plasma polarisation. As a result, each helical string composed of solid microparticles is topologically and dynamically controlled by plasma fluxes leading to particle charging and over-screening, the latter providing attraction even among helical strings of the same charge sign. These interacting complex structures exhibit thermodynamic and evolutionary features thought to be peculiar only to living matter such as bifurcations that serve as 'memory marks', self-duplication, metabolic rates in a thermodynamically open system, and non-Hamiltonian dynamics. We examine the salient features of this new complex 'state of soft matter' in light of the autonomy, evolution, progenity and autopoiesis principles used to define life. It is concluded that complex self-organised plasma structures exhibit all the necessary properties to qualify them as candidates for inorganic living matter that may exist in space provided certain conditions allow them to evolve naturally.

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Scientists need to focus on pale red dots to find Earth-like planets
A team of astronomers from Spain and the US has suggested that scientists looking for Earth-like planets in distant solar systems might find it more productive to focus on pale red dots, rather than blue ones.
According to a report by ABC Science, the astronomers observed the lunar eclipse of August 2008 from a simulated alien perspective.
They discovered that several biologically relevant molecules, such as oxygen, water, carbon dioxide and methane, show up stronger than expected in longer, redder wavelengths of light.

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