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EVERYTHING YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT THE UNIVERSE THIS MONTH...
8 ASTRONOMY • SEPTEMBER 2017
SNAPSHOT
Let’s
hear it for
abiogenesis
The origin of life? You can’t
“magic” it into existence.
One of the thorniest questions
we have is exactly how life origi-
nated on Earth. It’s been a mys-
tery for a very long time.
Scientists call the process abio-
genesis — how self-replicating
molecules began from nonliving
matter such as simple organic
compounds. The puzzle of
understanding abiogenesis
involves multiple sciences
including astronomy, physics,
biolog y, chem ist r y, a nd pa leon-
tology. It attempts to derive a
process that occurred nearly
4 billion years ago, on an Earth
that was very different from the
one we inhabit today.
One of astronomy’s most pow-
erful tools, spectroscopy, tells us
that chemistry is uniform
throughout the universe. So
although we don’t know exactly
when or how life originated, or
how its simplest form got going,
we do know it was governed by
the processes of organic chemis-
try that we understand well
today. As Richard Dawkins has
often said, life can’t be
“magicked” into existence.
The molecular hypothesis of
how life started originated in
the 1920s, and current ideas
build from it. Organic (carbon-
containing) molecules are com-
mon in the solar system and
universe. Going from simple
organics to self-replicating RNA
and DNA is a big step, but one
that is logical given the chemistry
of early Earth. We don’t yet know
what developed first or domi-
nated early: an RNA World, an
Iron-Sulfur World, a Protocell
World, a Deep Sea Vent World,
or a number of others?
It is a highly exciting time for
science. Understanding early
Earth and its chemistry is taking
us closer and closer to compre-
hending exactly how we got here.
— David J. Eicher
HOT BYTES >>
TRENDING
TO THE TOP
ROCKY PHOTO OP
NASA captured images
of Ceres at opposition,
when the Dawn space-
craft was positioned
directly between the
asteroid and the Sun.
LIGHT IT UP
Ice particles may be
responsible for hundreds
of mysterious flashes seen
between 2015 and 2016 by
the DSCOVR craft, which
monitors the solar wind.
FERMI MILESTONE
The Fermi Gamma-
ray Space Telescope
witnessed its billionth
gamma ray since its
launch in 2008.
Life on Earth may have originated in and around “black smokers” — hydrothermal vents on the ocean floor, like this one emitting
carbon dioxide in the Marianas Trench Marine National Monument in the South Pacific.
NOAA; TOP FROM LEFT: NASA/JPL-CALTECH/UCLA/MPS/DLR/IDA; NASA GODDARD; NASA GODDARD