Researchers say the ‘R’ in RNA may be abundant in space
Researcher say the 'R' in RNA may be abundant in space |
By simulating conditions in space, scientists in France say
they found ribose — the ‘R’ in RNA — is potentially present throughout the
universe.
A team of researchers at the Institut de Chime de Nice
(CNRS) in Paris have just published a study that goes a long way to the
pseudo-panspermia perspective. In the newest issue of Science, the researchers
suggest that ribose — a key sugar found in the genetic material of all organism
— might be formed on ices within comets. Ribose is a key part of nucleic acids
like DNA and RNA. The formation of such a compound on a comet would indicate
that the fundamental ingredients for life aren’t simply capable of traveling
across interstellar space to different worlds, but can also form in space.
We’ve already found amino acids on comets, cosmic dust laced with complex
organic matter, and basic sugars in other star systems. The Ribose finding
would amount to more evidence stacking up.
To be clear, the scientists haven’t actually found ribose on
a comet. Instead, they’ve used data gathered by other scientists to
artificially simulate the evolution of interstellar comet ice under astrophysical
conditions in a lab, and were able to derive ribose as a result.
The artificial comet, produced at the Institut d’
Astorphysique Spatiale, was made by mixing water, methanol, and ammonia in a
high vacuum chamber at minus 200 degrees Celsius. The researchers added dust
grains with ice that act as the raw material of comets, and irradiated the
whole thing with ultraviolet light. When the sample was heated to room
temperature — as a comet would be as it approaches the sun — it was found to
have developed simple sugars.
We still have to wait to confirm whether ribose can actually
be formed on a real comet, but the implications of this new discovery are
nevertheless huge. The more we learn about what kinds of compounds are laying
low within asteroids and comets, the more support panspermia-type theories
obtain. Perhaps life really did come to Earth on a comet. And perhaps we could
send life to other worlds by sticking some organic compounds on our own
artificial comet and firing it off into the depths of the universe.
Researchers say the ‘R’ in RNA may be abundant in space
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