Ancient asteroids created the ingredients for life on Earth – and potentially Mars, scientists say

Andrew Griffin
Monday 08 June 2020 04:37 EDT
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Emails reveal that an asteroid 100 metres wide 'slipped through' Nasa's detection systems
Emails reveal that an asteroid 100 metres wide 'slipped through' Nasa's detection systems (Nasa)

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Asteroids crashing into the ocean could have helped create the ingredients for life, scientists say.

By firing different materials together using a propellant gun, they found that amino acids could form when meteorites crash into the water.

That in turn could have helped bring the molecules that helped form life onto Earth – as well as potentially onto Mars, the researchers say.

Scientists have proposed two explanations for the arrival of the building blocks of life on Earth: either "extraterrestrial delivery", when they are brought on meteorites, or forming here on Earth.

The new research points to the former, the scientists from a range of Japanese institutions who conducted the study found.

The study saw researchers simulate the reactions that would happen when a meteorite crashes into the ocean. They did so by firing carbon dioxide, nitrogen, water, and iron together, using a propellant gun in a laboratory.

As they did so, they found that amino acids such as glycine and alanine. Such amino acids are key constituents of proteins, which in turn catalyse the kinds of biological reactions that form life.

Because scientists believe that Mars once had an ocean of its own, the same process could once have happened on the red planet, they speculate.

The Martian atmosphere is thought to have been made up of the same gases – carbon dioxide and nitrogen – as the early Earth, when it had its ocean. The same processes could therefore have happened, the researchers note.

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