Astronomy

(Marcin) #1
10 ASTRONOMY • SEPTEMBER 2017

T


he seven new Earth-
sized planets around
TRAPPIST-1, a red
dwarf star 39 light-
years away, recently
renewed public speculation
about extraterrestrials. Sixty
years ago, the consensus among
astronomers was that life’s
earthly genesis was so convo-
luted and unlikely that we may
be alone in the universe. For
some physicists like Enrico
Fermi, negative results from
the Search for Extraterrestrial
Intelligence (SETI) reinforced
that pessimism. But these days,
very few astronomers feel that
way. The current groupthink
is that the universe probably
teems with life.
Early discovery steps in the
near future will include spectro-
scopic space telescopes studying
exoplanet atmospheres, offering
the ability to study their compo-
sition. Earth’s habitable atmo-
sphere exists solely because of
photosynthetic plants exchang-
ing carbon dioxide for oxygen.
It would therefore be very
encouraging if we detected oxy-
gen around another world, as it
may point the way toward life.
But what is life? Scientists
can’t agree on a definition. Are
viruses alive? They have no
metabolism, they don’t feed
themselves, and many biologists
regard them as inanimate. Yet
their RNA coding forces host
cells to make lots of viral copies.
And does life begin through
chemistry? If certain occur-
rences cause life to arise from
non-living components, we
want to know if it happens
readily. In other words, is life
easy? Or does it require
extremely unlikely events?

STRANGEUNIVERSE


The coming decades may bring proof of aliens.
But will we know what we’re looking at?

BY BOB BERMAN

Finding aliens


A good argument for life
being “easy” is that earthly life
began almost as soon as it was
possible. After the molten Earth
cooled, there came a long
period when asteroids and com-
ets pummeled our surface. This
violence stopped some 4 billion
years ago. And bingo, the earli-
est fossils date from right then,
within 200 million years of
when it was first possible.
That’s awfully quick.
A good counterargument,
which makes the case for life
being “hard,” is that life-origi-
nation or abiogenesis happened
only once (that we know of ).
Every earthly creature is a
descendant of that first ances-
tral organism. We know this
because all life, from elephants
to bacteria, share remarkable
genetic similarities. They’re all

made of amino acids and sugars
with the same kinds of spirals
or asymmetries. Amino acids
can come with left- or right-
handed twists, called chirality.
But on Earth, life only uses
amino acid molecules with left-
handed twists, and is limited to
a right-handed direction in all
its sugars and DNA — the same
as a corkscrew.
If life started a second time
from scratch, it likely would
show differences in such chiral-
ity. Now, there are at least
6 million species of bacteria
(even if only 100,000 have had
their genomes sequenced). But
every single microbe, plant and
animal we’ve examined is a

descendant of that first life cre-
ation. The point: Why didn’t
life start a second time, a third,
or a hundredth? Four billion
years have passed, and yet life
originated only once. This sug-
gests that abiogenesis is not
easy, but hard.
So which is it? Fred Hoyle,
who coined the term “Big
Bang,” described an accidental
birth of life as akin to a tornado
sweeping through a junkyard
and creating a jumbo jet.
Supporting this, Francis Crick,
the co-discoverer of DNA’s dou-
ble helix, described the origin
of life as “almost a miracle, so
many are the conditions which

would have had to have been
satisfied to get it going.” (He
wasn’t suggesting a spiritual
origin, merely that the process
is utterly baffling.) If abiogen-
esis is really so unlikely, then
even given the immense size of
the cosmos, it’s possible we’re
the only example.
Of course, this assumes abio-
genesis only happens acciden-
tally. But what if advanced
aliens are creating life, or if
nature has immense innate
intelligence? I just saw an amaz-
ing nature documentary called
Flying Monsters 3D by David
Attenborough, showing the first
f lying creatures from millions
of years ago. The earliest bird

wings had the same shape as
modern aircraft. That airfoil
configuration is necessary for
all f light, and requires a wing’s
upper surface to be convex. It’s
hard to see how evolution could
have created it. Unlike giraffes’
necks, where incremental
increases offered survival
advantages, a step-by-step pro-
cess wouldn’t work for a wing
design. A slightly wrong shape
would be useless and confer no
benefit. Some 400,000 cells
would all have to simultane-
ously mutate in just the right
way to create a properly shaped
wing. This defies an evolution-
ary hypothesis.
Occam’s razor might suggest
some baked-in, overarching
intelligence. I’m not invoking
spirituality, merely that the
effect of random collisions and
mutations is not always a work-
able answer. So perhaps nature
is inherently smart. We cannot
visually see this intelligence,
just as we cannot see electrical
fields; and yes, this is a minor-
ity viewpoint. But if true, then
the sky’s the limit for ETs.
It’s guesswork. We know of
life on only a single world, so
our sample size is one. And
when you try to draw a line on
a graph but you have just one
data point, well, good luck.
We’ll have no shortcuts when
we probe the planetary system
of TRAPPIST-1.

BROWSE THE “STRANGE UNIVERSE” ARCHIVE AT http://www.Astronomy.com/Berman.

Contact me about
my strange universe by visiting
http://skymanbob.com.

While SETI has been around since 1960, it has yet to turn up any conclusive proof
of intelligent life. The Wow! signal, pictured above, is one of the more mysterious
signals received, but it has never repeated or been conclusively identified. BIG EAR
RADIO OBSERVATORY AND NORTH AMERICAN ASTROPHYSICAL OBSERVATORY (NAAPO)

BUT WHAT IS LIFE? SCIENTISTS
CAN’T AGREE ON A DEFINITION.
Free download pdf