Progress towards the vindication of panspermia
No Thumbnail Available
Date
2002-04-29
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Kluwer Academic Publishers
Abstract
Theories of panspermia are rapidly coming into vogue, with the possibility of the transfer of viable bacterial cells from one planetary abode to another being generally accepted as inevitable. The panspermia models of Hoyle and Wickramasinghe require the transfer of viable bacterial cells
from interstellar dust to comets and back into interplanetary and interstellar space. In such a cycle a viable fraction of as little as 10−18 at the inception of a newly formed comet/planet system suffices
for cometary panspermia to dominate over competing processes for the origin and transfer of life. The well-attested survival attributes of microbes under extreme conditions, which have recently been
discovered, gives credence to the panspermia hypothesis. The prediction of the theory that comets bring microbes onto the Earth at the present time is testable if aseptic collections of stratospheric air above the tropopause can be obtained. We describe a recent collection of this kind and report
microbiological analysis that shows the existence of viable cells at 41 km, falling to Earth at the rate of a few tonnes per day over the entire globe. Some of these cells have been cultured in the laboratory and found to include microorganisms that are not too different from related species on the
Earth. This is in fact what the Hoyle-Wickramasinghe theory predicts. The weight of evidence goes against the more conservative explanation that organisms are being lofted to the high atmosphere
from the ground.
Description
Keywords
Theories of panspermia, Panspermia models, Hoyle-Wickramasinghe theory, Earth