Testing Panspermia: Searching for ‘Bubbles of Life’ in the Galaxy

Does life spread through the galaxy like an infectious disease, with "bubbles" of inhabited planets? Image Credit: Harvard-Smithsonian CfA
Does life spread through the galaxy like an infectious disease, with “bubbles” of inhabited planets? Image Credit: Harvard-Smithsonian CfA

We still don’t know if there is life elsewhere in the universe, but scientists are working on techniques to better understand how it may have originated anyway, in the event that such alien biology is indeed discovered, even if just simple microbes. Focusing on exoplanets, the research suggests that if multiple inhabited worlds were found, then researchers could look for patterns similar to those found in epidemics on Earth, which might provide evidence for panspermia, the theory that life could spread through our galaxy from one habitable planet to another.

The number of inhabited (or “infected”) planets in the galaxy, and their distribution, could provide clues as to whether life tends to arise independently on suitable worlds, or whether it gets scattered among the stars by meteorites or comets. According to Henry Lin and Abraham Loeb of Harvard University, if there are clumpy patterns (or “bubbles”) of inhabited planets in the galaxy, with voids in between, that would be evidence for panspermia.

Exoplanets are now being discovered by the thousands, and estimated to be in the billions. Is it possible that life could be spread from planet one to another by panspermia? Image Credit: NASA
Exoplanets are now being discovered by the thousands, and estimated to be in the billions. Is it possible that life could be spread from planet one to another by panspermia? Image Credit: NASA

“It’s not that different from an epidemic,” said Lin, an undergraduate with the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics and lead author of the study. “If there’s a virus, you have a good idea that one of your neighbors will have a virus too. If the Earth is seeding life, or vice versa, there’s a good chance immediate neighbors will also have signs of life.”

According to Loeb, “Life could spread from host star to host star in a pattern similar to the outbreak of an epidemic. In a sense, the Milky Way galaxy would become infected with pockets of life.”

“In our theory clusters of life form, grow, and overlap like bubbles in a pot of boiling water,” Lin added.

The new study has been accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal Letters.

Even if not seeding life itself, the building blocks of life could still be distributed in the same way. Comets are known to contain such chemical building blocks, although actual life, such as bacteria, has not yet been detected in any. Only a handful have been studied in detail so far however, out of the thousands known to be in our Solar System.

Scientists are still hopeful though that evidence of alien life will eventually be found in other Solar Systems. Exoplanets are now being discovered in the thousands, with new ones virtually every week now. But astronomers don’t yet know how many of them are habitable, let alone actually inhabited. New telescopes now being designed will be able to study the atmospheres of many of them, searching for chemical biomarkers – evidence of biological activity. At that point, Lin and Loeb’s hypothesis could be useful; if a bunch of inhabited planets were to be found concentrated on one side of the sky, that would be evidence for panspermia, suggesting that Earth is located near the edge of one of these clusters. Even just 25 such planets would be enough, according to the researchers. If inhabited planets were more randomly distributed, that would suggest that panspermia isn’t responsible and that life originated separately on each world. Either result would be very useful in helping to understand how life arises on what kinds of planets and under what conditions. Lin acknowledges that all of this is still speculation at this point.

The panspermia theory says that life, or at least life's building blocks, could be spread among planets by meteorites or comets. Image Credit: argus/Shutterstock.com
The panspermia theory says that life, or at least life’s building blocks, could be spread among planets by meteorites or comets. Image Credit: argus/Shutterstock.com

“Most of the papers like this are going to be wrong,” he said.

There’s also the question of how long it would take panspermia to occur. If it happens relatively quickly, on the order of hundreds of millions of years, the clusters or “bubbles” of inhabited planets would likely be long-since dispersed by now. Broken-up bubbles might form new, smaller ones. If life spread very slowly however, the bubbles would be more difficult to detect.

Of course, what the alien life actually looked like could be another factor in determining either yay or nay for the panspermia idea. If it resembled nothing that we know of Earth, and had radically different chemistry involved, that would be a strike against panspermia. Even if it somehow evolved in a very different environment, any life originating from here, or from another planet to Earth, should have at least some basic similarities.

Microscopic objects in the Allan Hills 84001 Martian meteorite resembling fossilized bacteria. Image Credit: NASA
Microscopic objects in the Allan Hills 84001 Martian meteorite resembling fossilized bacteria. Image Credit: NASA

Another aspect of panspermia is the possibility of life spreading between planets in our own Solar System, such as from Earth to Mars or vice versa. Microscopic life could conceivably hitch a ride on meteorites travelling between Earth and Mars for example, but it is still unproven whether this has actually occurred. “Seeding” of life’s building blocks or even life itself could conceivably happen via comets within our Solar System as well, but that is also still speculation at this point.

Meteorites known to have originated from Mars have been found on Earth, which provides an easy method of obtaining a sample of Martian crust or rock without having to go there and bring it back. Some of these have been controversial, purportedly containing evidence of past life on Mars. The most famous of these, the Allan Hills 84001 meteorite, made headlines in 1996 when scientists, led by David S. McKay of NASA, announced that it seemed to have fossilized Martian bacteria in it. The findings have been criticized by other scientists since then, but McKay and his team have stuck to their original interpretation of the microscopic objects in the meteorite which resemble earthly bacteria. McKay has in turn criticized the inorganic model proposed to explain the findings, which “must explain simultaneously all of the properties that we and others have suggested as possible biogenic properties of this meteorite.”

The meteorite does, however, also contain carbonates which showed evidence of precipitating at a temperature of 64 ˚F (18 °C) with water and carbon dioxide from the Martian atmosphere. The isotopic ratios of the carbonates implied that the carbonates were deposited from a gradually evaporating subsurface water body, most likely a shallow aquifer meters or tens of meters below the surface. This would also agree with water-related findings from the various orbiters, landers and rovers on Mars.

Tissint is another Martian meteorite which may contain evidence of past biological activity in the form of deposits of carbon inside fissures inside the meteorite, as announced in 2014. Isotopic ratios of the carbon showed it to be very similar to the ratios of coal (biological in origin) and carbon in the atmosphere on Earth. It isn’t a slam dunk for life on Mars yet, but it is a compelling discovery.

Microbes live quite happily on the International Space Station (ISS) and experiments show that some can also survive harsh UV radiation in space. Photo Credit: NASA
Microbes live quite happily on the International Space Station (ISS) and experiments show that some can also survive harsh UV radiation in space. Photo Credit: NASA

If past life on Mars were proven, the next step would be to determine whether it arose independently on that planet, or if it shared a biological history with Earth. This would help scientists better evaluate how likely panspermia on a larger scale might be, beyond our Solar System.

Microorganisms have also been found to survive quite happily on the International Space Station (ISS). Some have been there since the construction of the space station began, and others have of course accompanied their human hosts. Scientists want to study them to learn more about the effects on long-duration human missions in enclosed habitats like the space station or spacecraft. In other experiments on the ISS, it has been shown that bacteria can indeed survive space travel. Spores of Bacillus pumilus SAFR-032 survived harsh UV radiation and simulated Martian environments. The experiments support the idea that panspermia would be possible elsewhere in space. In 2014, it was also reported by Russian scientists that earthly microbes had been found living on the outside of the ISS. Those findings, however, weren’t confirmed by NASA.

If Lin and Loeb are correct, life might get spread throughout the galaxy or even universe rather easily and be very common. Or perhaps it only arises independently on planets with suitable conditions. We don’t know yet, but we are getting closer to finally answering some of these questions.

 

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One Comment

  1. I believe life arises both independently and by being “scattered” among the planets by whatever means possible. The infinite number of galaxies, stars and planets point to habitability as a common occurrence throughout the cosmos. How exciting it will be when we finally discover the first instances of life “out there.”

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