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Earth Life Possibly Could Reach Titan

dylanduck writes "New simulations show that big asteroid impacts on Earth could have sent about 600 million boulders flying into space. About 100 have reached Jupiter's moon Europa - but they landed at 24 miles/sec. 'This must be rather frustrating if you're a bacterium that survived launch from Earth,' says a researcher. But 30 boulders from each impact reach Titan - and they land gently." From the article: "'I thought the Titan result was really surprising - how many would get there and how slowly they'd land,' Treiman told New Scientist. 'The thing I don't know about is if there are any bugs on Earth that would be happy living on Titan.' Titan's surface temperature is a very cold -179C and its chemistry is very different from Earth's."

3 of 237 comments (clear)

  1. Your points are moot. by technoextreme · · Score: 4, Insightful
    That's a tough bug. The temperature isn't such a big deal and time isn't either, as there are bacteria found in Antarctica which were left over from when it was more temperate. Tough bugs, sure, but traveling through space also means withstanding the full bore radation of Mr. Sun, with no atmosphere to protect you. I'm not sure I want to meet one of these in a dark alley. From the article: "'I thought the Titan result was really surprising - how many would get there and how slowly they'd land,' Treiman told New Scientist. 'The thing I don't know about is if there are any bugs on Earth that would be happy living on Titan.' Titan's surface temperature is a very cold -179C and its chemistry is very different from Earth's."
    http://www.space.com/searchforlife/seti_saltlovers _050721.html First thing I searched for is bacteria and radiation lovers. They are life forms on earth that can survive this type of conditions. Also, it is a fact that bacteria survived on the moon for three years during the Apollo missions.
    Ok, I'll bite, how do they know they came from Earth rather than, say were asteroids? A lot of asteroids look like they broke away from something as they're irregular in shape, perhaps there's other likely origins. But this has gone from 'could have' to did without convincing me. After all, we see supposed martian rock on earth. Who's really to say that those martian rocks broke from Mars, rather than are the stuff Mars is made up of and some of it landed on Earth, or some other theory.
    Ummm.. It's a simulation. They didn't actually discover the rocks. They didn't see any evidence. They just did the math. All they said is that they know that this stuff got shot into space and they figured out that it can reach Titan.
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  2. Re:Airborne bacteria? by linguizic · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Wouldn't it be something if everyone stopped dodging the most likely possibillity that life started on this planet?

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    Does this sig remind you of Agatha Christie?
  3. Re:Airborne bacteria? by linguizic · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Panspermia is just a dodge. For some reason people can't believe that here on earth, where life as we know it has done better by far than anyother place that we know of, could possibly have been where life originated. The probabillity of life evolving somewhere else and then being magically whisped away to earth is even MORE improbable than life originating here. Just because something that we know has happened is improbable doesn't mean we have to completely throw all of the most probable scenarios for it to happen out the window.

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    Does this sig remind you of Agatha Christie?