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NASA confirms building blocks of life found on comets
By Paul Lester Fresh evidence has been revealed to support the theory that life on Earth began in space. NASA's Stardust probe, a specially-designed-comet ‘chaser’, successfully collected particles shed from Comet Wild 2 back in 2004, and NASA scientists have since confirmed for the first time that amino acids can indeed be found on these extraterrestrial bodies.
18:40 August 19, 2009 PDT
Amino acids, the building blocks of life, form the basis of proteins and are created when carbon compounds and water are energized by particles such as protons. Samples of Glycine were confirmed by NASA labs after extensive testing. Dr Jamie Elsila, lead author of a paper on the research, said: “Glycine is an amino acid used by living organisms to make proteins, and this is the first time an amino acid has been found in a comet. Our discovery supports the theory that some of life's ingredients formed in space and were delivered to Earth long ago by meteorite and comet impacts."
Stardust gathered samples from the comet’s trail by passing through gas and dust and using a special grid filled with aerogel to collect the debris. This was parachuted back to Earth in January 2006 and scientists have been analyzing it since. "We actually analyzed aluminum foil from the sides of tiny chambers that hold the aerogel in the collection grid," said Elsila. "As gas molecules passed through the aerogel, some stuck to the foil. We spent two years testing and developing our equipment to make it accurate and sensitive enough to analyze such incredibly tiny samples."
Before this announcement could be made, extensive testing took place to confirm that the Glycine did in fact originate in space and to rule out possible contamination from sources on our planet. This research used isotopic analysis of the foil and successfully confirmed that the comet-based Glycine contained more of the heavier Carbon 13 atoms than Glycine from Earth, which led Elsila to announce: “We discovered that the Stardust-returned Glycine has an extraterrestrial carbon isotope signature, indicating that it originated on the comet".
The next stage would be to gather more information from the main nucleus of a comet, which is likely to contain more complex mixtures of amino acids at higher levels. This is predictably quite tricky to do, though NASA is optimistic that Europe’s Rosetta spacecraft, the first designed to orbit and land on a comet, will successfully achieve its goal when it reaches Comet 67P in 2014, after a ten-year journey.
{ Does this mean that comets can contain primitive forms of life? this findings can mean that comets may have seeded our earth long time back and with these kinds of particles, life has been formed on earth and on other planets? People who are religious and believe in God consider this findings of NASA as a joke or dismiss it with a laugh.
People who believe in Darwisism theory of evolution of life may find it interesting, and agree with the theory of building blocks of life found on comets. now who doesn't think that there must be life out there in other planets, but the problem is in finding one.
Amino acids are small molecules that, when strung together into chains, form a diversity of proteins. For four decades, scientists have found a multitude of amino acids in some meteorites, the bits of asteroids that land on Earth. More recently, astronomers reported that amino acids might float throughout the cosmos, a belief resulting from their detection of the color signatures of glycine, the simplest of the amino acids, in distant interstellar gas clouds.
Sometimes origins of life are beyond our understanding, but still we human beings try to challenge god and come up with different theories, like this latest one stating that raw materials or say ingredientsof life arrived on earth from outer space. Some doubts remain about this claim, but if it is true, it would then not be surprising that when the clouds condense into stars and planets, the building blocks of life might be readily available there. }
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at 04:55 on August 20th, 2009
Let put it another way the universe is full of the raw materials that made life, it just needs the right place and the right conditions to be created. Water on earth and its atmosphere , the earth position around Sol and its lunar partner our moon was an ideal breeding ground for life.
I expect that the conditions are right else where in the cosmos and we are not alone in this universe and there are human races just like ours, many of them. But thankfully far enough away to cause us or us to cause them any problems due to greed and selfishness genes of our leaders.
I don't think earth was seeded it was all here already as its everywhere else. What this find proves to me that we are not alone in the universe and we are certainly not unique as the survival of the fittest elsewhere logical would create being just like us. Its the pattern of evolution that logically has to be similar on a carbon based world such as ours.
Being an atomist it all fits in with my own views and opinions concerning creation of the universe and life. A God has nothing to do with it.
at 05:00 on August 20th, 2009
Is God in it self not merely a theory?
Science is all we have that is with in reason acceptable facts.
Every thing else is nothing more then hypothetical and a believe structure, but not truth nor worth fighting over.
at 04:57 on August 28th, 2009
I don believe in all dis scientific discoveries that amino acids contains life particles......we must only believe in the Almighty.....!!!