News on Exobiology
- Will we ever find life somewhere?
- Organics formes easy in new planetary systems
- Building blocks of life generates naturally in comets
- Super-Earth unlikely able to transfer life to other planets
- New online SETILive service
- ESO finds life in space - on Earth
- Amoeba may offer key clue to photosynthetic evolution
- SETI-search focuses on Kepler-planets
- Earths atmosphere was NOT Methane-dominated
- Alien spaceprobes gone unnoticed?
- Exoligths could reveal alien civilisations
- "Sweet spots" for complex organic molecules
- Space is filled with conplex organic molecules
- Discovery of extreme amoeba
- Life threatening interstellar events
- Living in the galactic danger zone
- Alien life more likely on desert-planets
- Life from Earth caould have seeded the entire galaxy
- Doplhin-communication ideal for interstellar talk
- DNA building-blocks from space
- Meteorites may hold a toolkit for creating life
- How to find life in the Universe
- Asteroid served as "custom orders" of life-ingredients
- Evolution from microbes to mobile life
- SETI focuses on 86 Earthlike planets
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Asteroid served as "custom orders" of life-ingredients
Friday, 10 June 2011 09:04
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| Astronomy - Exobiology / SETI |
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Some asteroids may have been like "molecular factories" cranking out life's ingredients and shipping them to Earth via meteorite impacts, according to scientists who've made discoveries of molecules essential for life in material from certain kinds of asteroids and comets. Now it appears that at least one may have been less like a rigid assembly line and more like a flexible diner that doesn't mind making changes to the menu. In January, 2000, a large meteoroid exploded in the atmosphere over northern British Columbia, Canada, and rained fragments across the frozen surface of Tagish Lake. Because many people witnessed the fireball, pieces were collected within days and kept preserved in their frozen state. This ensured that there was very little contamination from terrestrial life. "The Tagish Lake meteorite fell on a frozen lake in the middle of winter and was collected in a way to make it the best preserved meteorite in the world," said Dr. Christopher Herd of the University of Alberta, lead author of a paper about the analysis of the meteorite fragments published June 10 in the journal Science. Source: NASA |




