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Tori M. Hoehler NASA Ames Research Center
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The Drake Equation: N = R* f p n e f l f i f c L N = The number of communicative civilizations R* = The rate of formation of suitable stars f p = The fraction of those stars with planets. n e = The number of Earth-like worlds per planetary system f l = The fraction of Earth-like planets where life actually develops f i = The fraction of life sites where intelligence develops f c = The fraction of communicative planets (those on which electromagnetic communications technology develops) L = The "lifetime" of communicating civilizations
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Once the origin of life occurs, how resilient is a biosphere to changes that occur over a planet’s lifetime? Adaptability Challenges Our single example suggests that life can be resilient on time scales of at least 1/3 the age of the solar system
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Any of the factors we identified as “extremes” could constitute a challenge to the long-term stability of life Harsh conditions for biomolecules (temperature extremes, radiation, pH, unsuitable chemistry) Resource Limitation (energy, materials, solvent)
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Stars Evolve – as they do, their temperature, light emission, and even size change
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Planets Evolve... (for one thing, they start hot and cool off)
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Just Right? Too Hot Too Cold The Importance of Heat Flow Heat flow → volcanism, crustal turn-over
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Volcanoes Bring Mantle Chemistry to the Surface
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A chemically differentiated planet is like a battery... = (but the battery is only tapped when volcanoes and vents operate)
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Climate Fluctuates, Sometimes Dramatically
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Mars Through Time? Saltier Ultimately No Light ColderMore Radiation? More Acidic?
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“Stuff” Happens
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year century million yr. billion yr. ten thousand yr. 100 millionmillion10,00010010.01 Hiroshima Tunguska K/T TNT equivalent yield (MT) Global catastrophe Tsunami danger (Credit: D. Morrison) Terrestrial Impact Frequency “Armageddon” Impact (Texas-sized!) “Catastrophic” depends on who you are and where you live...
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Temperature (°C) Depth (km) 2 0 200 1 1000 Geothermal Gradient Surface-Sterilizing Impacts (Sleep & Zahnle, 1998) Habitable Heat-Sterilized Impact Heating
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Life Alters its own Environment Resource Recycling Energy BudgetChemistry Climate
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Energy Balance (Used solar radiation to “charge up” the Earth’s chemical battery (by creating very oxidizing conditions at the Earth’s surface) Oxygen Production (Toxic for some, great for others – shifted the “balance of power”) Climate (Consumed CO 2 and may have altered the production of other greenhouse gases (e.g., from methanogens, who are sensitive to O 2 ) – this must have affected greenhouse warming and climate) Radiation Budget (Produce ozone (from O2), which created a shield for UV – less radiation = clement conditions for a greater variety of organisms)
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How can life survive (thrive!), in the face of all these potential challenges, on time scales comparable to the lifetime of a solar system?
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At an individual level, versatility is important Tolerance to Extremes Metabolism * These factors may sometimes be at odds
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At the level of the whole biosphere, diversity is key
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Technological Innovation (?) Sufficient Rates of Evolution Diversity of Niches, Into Which Organisms Can Evolve (these have worked on Earth for 3+ billion years)
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Questions?
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