Publication Date:
2019-07-18
Description:
Exobiochemistry is the putative biochemistry of extraterrestrial life. It suggests the possible energy and material bases of extraterrestrial life and could help detect it. The diverse biochemistry of Earth indicates that a wide range of exobiochemistry is possible on other planets. An exobiochemistry will probably use the same energy sources as Earths ecology, light, biological organic material, and more rarely abiotic chemicals. Extraterrestrial life will be based on familiar chemical principles and probably capture, store, and release energy using oxidation-reduction reactions. Extraterrestrial life will give chemical indications of its existence. Key elements will be concentrated, stored, and recycled, altering their availability and isotopic composition. Any significant departure from chemical equilibrium would be good evidence for exobiochemistry, but an integrated system of departures from the expected equilibrium would be better. Exobiochemistry can be expected to include closed biogeochemical cycles of the major life supporting elements and may well show the complex dynamic close-coupled interactions that characterize the terrestrial biosphere. Terrestrial biochemistry provides a basis for generalization and extrapolation but it does not set bounds on exobiochemistry. In exobiochemistry we can expect: 1. closed chemical cycles that recycle materials, nutrients, and catalysts, 2. organisms with complementary metabolisms that cooperate to close the chemical cycles, 3. a high probability of a carbon and water chemistry, but some possibility of a non-carbon or non-water chemistry in extreme environments, and, 4. life similar to bacteria more prevalent than higher plants and animals.
Keywords:
Life Sciences (General)
Type:
32nd International Conference on Environmental Systems; Jul 15, 2002 - Jul 18, 2002; San antonio, TX; United States
Format:
text