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The Alien Observatory --"We May Soon Discover Worlds That Host Lifeforms with Strange...
The Daily Galaxy ^ | 3/31/18

Posted on 04/02/2018 6:23:28 PM PDT by LibWhacker

In 2016, NASA sequenced DNA in space for the first time, but alien life, we may soon discover, may be vastly different on other planets and moons, particularly as we expand our efforts to explore ocean worlds with our solar system and beyond. “Most strategies for life detection rely upon finding features known to be associated with Earth's life, such as particular classes of molecules,” the researchers wrote.

DNA and RNA are the building blocks of life on Earth, but the molecules of life might differ substantially on another planet. A new paper by scientists at Georgetown University, published online this month in the journal Astrobiology, suggests a method for identifying alien life using modern genome sequencing technology and chemometrics, a field that uses a wealth of statistical pattern-recognition protocols to analyze chemical data in this case the components of DNA and RNA.

"Ultimately," the Georgetown team writes, "the chemometric fingerprints of living systems, which may differ significantly from nonliving systems, could provide an empirical, agnostic means of detecting life."

Nucleic acids like DNA form structures that will inherently bind to a host of materials and shapes, including organic molecules, minerals, and even metals. In the system that the researchers propose, reports Kristen V. Brown for Gizmodo, a technique sometimes used in cancer detection called the “systematic evolution of ligands by exponential enrichment,” researchers propose creating nucleic acids that can bind to organic molecules that are indicators of life.

The nucleic acids would theoretically act as a sort of sensor than can be amplified, and the binding patterns analyzed, to reveal a kind of biochemical signature—a “fingerprint,” as the researchers put it. The biochemistry of the alien life might be completely different from anything that we have seen on Earth, but if the molecular structures identified are complex, it’s a pretty good signal that it’s actually life.

Because nucleic acids are exponentially amplified by the polymerase chain reaction, even very small input signals could be translated into a robust readable output. The derived sequences could be identified by a small, portable sequencing device or by capture and optical imaging on a DNA microarray. Without presupposing any particular molecular framework, this agnostic approach to life detection could be used from Mars to the far reaches of the Solar System, all within the framework of an instrument drawing little heat and power.

The Georgetown researchers propose is just one idea for how to best ID alien life forms, but it is a much smaller and less complicated system than other methods for detecting molecular signs of life, such as the mass spectroscopy systems aboard the Mars rover Curiosity. The researchers point out that efforts to miniaturize genome sequencers, like Oxford Nanopore’s MinION, which fits in the palm of a hand, could one day make for extremely small, lightweight methods for astronauts to detect life forms in space.

“Without presupposing any particular molecular framework, this agnostic approach to life detection could be used from Mars to the far reaches of the Solar System, all within the framework of an instrument drawing little heat and power,” the researchers wrote.


TOPICS: Astronomy; Science; UFO's
KEYWORDS: alien; astronomy; detecting; dna; fungible; georgetown; helixmakemineadouble; life; rna; science; unearthly; worlds; xplanets
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To: Mariner; ETL; Moonman62; IWONDR
"To consider the Earth as the only populated world in infinite space is as absurd as to assert that in an entire field of millet, only one grain will grow." -- Metrodorus, 4th c BC Greek philosopher
"Heaven and earth are large, yet in the whole of space they are but as a small grain of rice. How unreasonable it would be to suppose that, besides the heaven and earth which we can see, there are no other heavens and no other earths." -- Teng Mu, 13th c AD Chinese philosopher

41 posted on 04/03/2018 2:48:08 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (www.tapatalk.com/groups/godsgravesglyphs/, forum.darwincentral.org, www.gopbriefingroom.com)
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To: Luircin

Francis Crick, co-discover of DNA, realized that it couldn’t have “just happened” as it is so complex. So he came to believe in “pan sperma”. That aliens put the code of life into DNA and shot it out into space, wishing that it would land somewhere and be fruitful. Of course, I’m not sure how the aliens got life.

And many years ago it was discovered that DNA has a “shadow DNA” - so twice as much information as Crick thought.


42 posted on 04/03/2018 2:58:09 AM PDT by 21twelve
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To: Mariner

That’s only 10^24. You need to keep running the trillions for a while to get into the numbers it would take for random spontaneous life. May I also suggest using an infinite multiverse generating machine?


43 posted on 04/03/2018 3:24:42 AM PDT by D Rider
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To: LibWhacker

And we may discover that Algore was right - but I doubt it...


44 posted on 04/03/2018 3:50:52 AM PDT by trebb (I stopped picking on the mentally ill hypocrites who pose as conservatives...mostly ;-})
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To: 21twelve

Good post.

The elites let the truth out slowly.

“They” are here....


45 posted on 04/03/2018 4:52:36 AM PDT by cgbg (Hidden behind the social justice warrior mask is corruption and sexual deviance.)
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To: D Rider

“You need to keep running the trillions for a while to get into the numbers it would take for random spontaneous life. “

I never suggested random, spontaneous life.


46 posted on 04/03/2018 9:12:59 AM PDT by Mariner (War Criminal #18)
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To: cgbg

Aliens might already be here, but I don’t think so. The problem with pan sperma is that it doesn’t solve the riddle of how life got started - it just pushes it off to another planet. Or perhaps another dimension?

If Crick believes that DNA was engineered by aliens, I believe that it was engineered by God. To those that believe in neither, both ideas are far-fetched!


47 posted on 04/03/2018 11:31:21 AM PDT by 21twelve
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