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Life on mars |
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| Dec7-04, 12:12 PM | #1 |
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Life on mars
Hi Guys,
Just a question that has been bugging me for a while about looking for life on mars (or any other planets). When landing on mars, NASA (or whoever) always seem to search for water as a sign that life once existed on mars. Is it not a bit presumptious to think that just because life on earth requires water, that life on different planets will too?? Is it that unconceivable to think that there could be a life form that can live off different 'food' (minerals from rocks, sunlight, for example)??? I know that the biology of everything we know (obviously) comes from the life forms on this planet, but isn`t that a fairly small sample to be using?? Cheers, PS |
| Dec7-04, 02:28 PM | #2 |
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This is, of course, a problem when it comes to searching for 'life'.
There are many fine-sounding reasons why 'life' needs water, and it's quite a challenge to point to some carbon-based chemistry in which complex systems of complex molecules can do their things without water. However, not all searches for extra-terrestrial life are searches for water. For example, even on Mars, one of the main instruments used to look for life is the humble camera ... if you can see something moving, and it's not a shadow, being blown by the wind (etc), then it could well be life! In other searches, there is no immediate assumption of the need for water ... one way you could infer life on Earth is the presence of gases that are not in (long term) equilibrium, so analyses of the atmospheres of other planets could suggest life is their compositions were 'unbalanced.' Finally (for now), consider the famousSeti@Home - the only assumption about 'life' being made by this search is that ET can transmit powerful radio signals! |
| Dec7-04, 02:40 PM | #3 |
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If you saw that program on the telly "What we don't know" (or something like that) with Martin Rees, they pretty much answred that question. Organic molecules are known to exist in outer space and we alreday know that they blueprint of carbon-based life with water as a solvent works.
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| Dec7-04, 04:29 PM | #4 |
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Life on mars
It makes sense to look for the kind of life forms we do know exist and they all require water.
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| Dec8-04, 04:49 PM | #5 |
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Welcome to Physics Forums, primal schemer!
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| Dec8-04, 06:01 PM | #6 |
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We may find that life is both pernicious and tenacious, and I suspect that statistically, any environment that lasts long enough and is not subject to radical swings in condition may eventually give rise to "life" of some kind. |
| Dec8-04, 06:33 PM | #7 |
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How would you - primal schemer and turbo-1 particularly - go about searching for life (other than the methods already being considered - and implemented - by NASA)?
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| Dec9-04, 05:36 AM | #8 |
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1) Even if we do find water on another planet, it is no guarantee that there will be life (seeing as we have an abundance of water and life only started here once!!) 2) If we don`t find water on another planet, it is no guarantee that there cannot be life there. As to how I would go looking, well I hadn`t thought that far ahead really!! But I guess I would try and cast as wide a net as possible (which I am sure NASA are doing). Although looking for life on other planets kinda reminds me of a blindfolded man trying to find his way around a room!! |
| Dec9-04, 04:45 PM | #9 |
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); also, we probably have no way of ever knowing how many times life began on Earth, only the wiped out by the next planetismal impact (which melted the 'crust' to a depth of, say, 10 km).
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| Dec9-04, 07:24 PM | #10 |
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I always thought water was sought so much based on what we've seen on Earth: it is incredibly diverse to the point where it boggles the mind but virtually all of it needs some form of water to survive. The opposite is true: where you have water you are pretty guaranteed to find life. This is an incredibly universal thing on our little planet so as a result it seems like a good place to start when searching for life elsewhere.
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| Dec9-04, 07:59 PM | #11 |
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| Dec10-04, 02:30 AM | #12 |
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The same may be said of human life forms. Radio signals may be so primitive and range limited that no 'intelligent' civilization could ever hope to detect them.
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