by Denyse O'Leary
ARN correspondent
In "'Sweet spot' for life's chemistry found, scientists say," Irene Klotz reports, "Methanol discovery has implications for understanding where to look for life."
Methanol (wood alcohol), we are told, can trigger complex organic chemistry, so given that it didn't likely exist on early Earth, some researchers have sought it in space.
In other words, find the methanol and scientists believe you find the chemical pathways to life.
And some young stars do produce methanol."Searching for methanol in various regions in space will tell researchers where to look for other complex organic molecules, which will eventually lead to the formation of life," astronomer Sachindev Shenoy, with NASA's Ames Research Center in California, told Discovery News.
Now that we have learned that complex, organic molecules lead eventually to the formation of life, we learn
"The clouds we're observing appear to harbor more favorable conditions for life than the pre-solar cloud from which our solar system formed. And there is life in our solar system," Amanda Cook, a post-doctoral research fellow at NASA Ames, told Discovery News. "The implication is that life may have an even easier time taking root, so to speak, in other parts of the galaxy."So Earth has life even though our solar system doesn't meet these people's criterion, which proves that solar systems that do meet their criterion foster life more easily. Not that we have evidence or anything.
It's come to this.
Denyse O'Leary is co-author of The Spiritual Brain. Follow UD News at Twitter!
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