The Sunday Guardian

Is the Philae lander comet full of aliens?

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The Philae lander could be sitting on a comet full of alien life — and we wouldn’t know if it was, according to two scientists. The comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenk­o’s black crust and other features are best explained by the fact that it has living organisms under its icy surface, they said.

Rosetta, the European space craft orbiting the comet, is also said to have picked up strange “clusters” of organic material that look suspicious­ly like viral particles. But neither Rosetta nor its lander are equipped to search for direct evidence of life after a proposal to include this in the mission was allegedly laughed out of court.

Astronomer and astrobiolo­gist Professor Chandra Wickramasi­nghe, who was involved in the mission planning 15 years ago, said: “I wanted to include a very inexpensiv­e life-detection experiment. At the time it was thought this was a bizarre propositio­n.” He and colleague Dr Max Wallis, from the University of Cardiff, believe 67P and other comets like it could provide homes for living microbes similar to the “extremophi­les” that inhabit the most inhospitab­le regions of the Earth. Comets may have helped to sow the seeds of life on Earth and possibly other planets such as Mars early in the life of the solar system, they argue. Philae made history last November after detaching from its Rosetta mothership and bouncing down on to the surface of the comet, coming to rest close to a cliff or crater wall. After being forced into hibernatio­n by the lack of sunlight reaching its solar panels, the probe has delighted scientists by “waking up” as the comet races towards the sun. The comet, described as looking like a “rubber duck”, has two lobes joined by a thinner neck and measures around four kilometres (2.5 miles) across. Currently it is about 176.7 million miles from Earth and travelling at more than 73,000 mph.

Prof Wickramasi­nghe and Dr Wallis have carried out computer simulation­s that suggest microbes could inhabit watery regions of the comet. Organisms containing anti-freeze salts could be active at temperatur­es as low as minus 40C, their research shows. The comet has a black hydrocarbo­n crust overlaying ice, smooth icy “seas”, and flat-bottomed craters containing “lakes” of re-frozen water overlain with organic debris.

Prof Wickramasi­nghe said: “What we’re saying is that data coming from the comet seems to unequivoca­lly, in my opinion, point to micro-organisms being involved in the formation of the icy structures, the prepondera­nce of aromatic hydrocarbo­ns, and the very dark surface.

“These are not easily explained in terms of pre-biotic chemistry. The dark material is being constantly replenishe­d as it is boiled off by heat from the sun. Something must be doing that at a fairly prolific rate.”

He said several cracks in the ice had been shown to be “spewing out material” that is falling on to the surface.

“I think the microbioti­c activity just under the surface results in gas which builds up to the point where the overlaying layers of ice can’t withstand the stresses,” said the professor.

Biological mechanisms were the likely explanatio­n for the large quantities of organic gases that had been observed around comets, along with water, he maintained.

Philae had confirmed the presence of “ring and linear chain” organic molecules on the surface of 67P that were more complex than simple hydrocarbo­ns such as methane, said Prof Wickramasi­nghe. However it was impossible to say if these represente­d amino acids, the building blocks of proteins. One tantalisin­g find was the discovery of organic “particle clusters” by Rosetta in the gases surroundin­g the comet, which resembled viral particles collected from the Earth’s upper atmosphere.

“They might be viral particles,” said Prof Wickramasi­nghe.

As the comet reaches its closest point to the sun - a distance of 195 million kilometres ( 121 million miles) - its family of microorgan­isms is likely to become more active, say the scientists. Prof Wickramasi­nghe, director of the Buckingham Centre for Astrobiolo­gy, believes it is time for a complete shift of thinking about the possibilit­y of alien life. He said: “The current estimate for the number of extra-solar planets in the galaxy is 140 billion plus. Planets that can harbour life are really quite abundant in the galaxy, and the next neighbouri­ng system to us is only spitting distance away. I think it’s inevitable that life is going to be a cosmic phenomenon.

“Five hundred years ago it was a struggle to have people accept that the Earth was not the centre of the universe. After that revolution our thinking has remained Earth-centred in relation to life and biology. It’s deeply ingrained in our scientific culture and it will take a lot of evidence to kick it over.”

He pointed out that when proof of organic molecules in space emerged in the 1970s “the rebuttals were fierce” from the scientific establishm­ent.

Future missions to 67P and other comets should include lifeseekin­g instrument­s, he said. But space agencies appeared reluctant to engage in a serious quest for life that risked challengin­g “a long establishe­d paradigm”.

Dr Wallis said: “Rosetta has already shown that the comet is not to be seen as a deep-frozen inactive body, but supports geological processes and could be more hospitable to micro-life than our Arctic and Antarctic regions.” THE INDEPENDEN­T

Computer simulation­s that suggest microbes could inhabit watery regions of the comet. Organisms containing anti-freeze salts could be active at temperatur­es as low as minus 40C, their research shows.

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