Can Alien Microbes Endanger Human Life on Other Planets?

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The discussion centers on the hypothetical scenario of astronauts visiting an Earth-like planet and the implications of exposure to alien microbes. Key points include the uncertainty surrounding the potential dangers posed by alien microorganisms, even if the planet's conditions mirror those of Earth. The conversation highlights the possibility that alien microbes could be incompatible with human biology, potentially preventing infection due to metabolic differences. Conversely, there is a concern that humans could inadvertently introduce harmful microbes to the alien environment, leading to ecological disruption. The dialogue emphasizes the speculative nature of these scenarios, acknowledging that without concrete evidence of alien life, any conclusions remain conjectural. The potential for mutual biological hazards is also noted, suggesting that both humans and aliens could face risks from each other's microorganisms. Overall, the discussion underscores the complexity of interspecies interactions in extraterrestrial contexts.
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Suppose a group of astronauts traveled to another Earth-like planet. They get off their space-craft, take off their space suits and begin sunbathing, unclothed. As their immune system has not evolved on this planet, would they immediately die as a result of exposure to alien microbes? So, even if the planet has the same atmospheric composition, temperature and the same gravity as Earth, would alien microbes still make it inhospitable to human life? Also, suppose aliens came to Earth and did the same thing, would they also die because their immune systems have not evolved on Earth, so they would not have immunity to microbes on Earth?
 
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Hmm. Lots of assumptions, too many I think. So let's try to identify some and see what we can do.

For example:
Aliens use L (left handed) or R (right handed) stereoiosomers - e.g., L-acetylcarnitine

Humans can can metabolize L-glucose ( sugar in honey), humans cannot use R-glucose. So the
alien microbes would starve if they need to metabolize anything our bodies produce (what
disease causing microbes do to stay alive in us, "eat"). If there was an L-R mismatch.

There is a list of stuff like this. So the likelihood of them being able to infect us is
very low. The nastiness could come more likely from us humans exporting some microbes from Earth or
bringing home hitchhikers. In either case the foreign bacteria could long term out compete
some native ones and eventually coat significant portions of either planet with refrigerator
slime-like bacterial growths, for a gross example.

So: answer - while fun to think about, the results are all over the place - ranging from absolutely no effects to both planets becoming inhospitable. An alien plague ala Michael Crieghton 'The Andromeda Strain' is very remotely possible. And there is no real scientific way to make sensible answers. It would all be speculation.
 
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I agree with Jim. One addition - just as there might be something in the alien biochemistry that is fatal to us, there might be something in our biochemistry that is fatal to them.
 
random39a said:
Suppose a group of astronauts traveled to another Earth-like planet. They get off their space-craft, take off their space suits and begin sunbathing, unclothed. As their immune system has not evolved on this planet, would they immediately die as a result of exposure to alien microbes? So, even if the planet has the same atmospheric composition, temperature and the same gravity as Earth, would alien microbes still make it inhospitable to human life? Also, suppose aliens came to Earth and did the same thing, would they also die because their immune systems have not evolved on Earth, so they would not have immunity to microbes on Earth?
What they said...

Or it could be something fun like what happened in the film Prometheus.
 
There's no real way to know what would happen to an alien species if they came to Earth (or if we went to their planet). It all depends on the enormously complicated way their biology works compared to ours. Since there's no way to know what would happen until we actually discover alien life, any discussion here would be mostly speculation.

Thread locked.
 
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