通过更好地了解地球最早的环境来限制生命前化学

T. Lyons, K. Rogers, R. Krishnamurthy, L. Williams, S. Marchi, E. Schwieterman, N. Planavsky, C. Reinhard
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引用次数: 3

摘要

任何对地球外现在或过去生命的探索都应该考虑可能导致生命起源的初始过程和相关的环境控制。就像在地球上一样,这样的理解远远超出了简单的有机分子如何成为更复杂的生命生物分子,因为它还必须包括允许、调节和最关键地促进生命出现的益生元途径的关键环境因素。此外,我们还想知道,部分由液态水定义的宜居性是如何维持的,以便生命能够持续存在并进化到形成自己环境的程度。研究人员通过复杂的分析和计算技术,成功地探索了过去几十亿年地球共同进化环境和生物圈的许多章节,这些发现对寻找地外生命产生了深远的影响。然而,尽管经过了几十年的研究,在地球历史的最初数亿年里,生命的起源在很大程度上仍然是未知的。这份报告集中在一个关键点上:地球上生命出现的最早步骤与我们最早的环境中不断进化的化学和物理条件密切相关。然而,对这种关系的严谨的、跨学科的理解还没有得到充分的探索,一旦得到更好的理解,将为我们寻找地外生命提供信息。这样一来,对生命出现的研究必须成为一项真正的跨学科努力,需要将传统的生命前化学平台扩展到包括地球化学家、大气化学家、地质学家和地球物理学家、天文学家、任务科学家和工程师以及天体生物学家。
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Constraining prebiotic chemistry through a better understanding of Earth’s earliest environments
Any search for present or past life beyond Earth should consider the initial processes and related environmental controls that might have led to its start. As on Earth, such an understanding lies well beyond how simple organic molecules become the more complex biomolecules of life, because it must also include the key environmental factors that permitted, modulated, and most critically facilitated the prebiotic pathways to life's emergence. Moreover, we ask how habitability, defined in part by the presence of liquid water, was sustained so that life could persist and evolve to the point of shaping its own environment. Researchers have successfully explored many chapters of Earth's coevolving environments and biosphere spanning the last few billion years through lenses of sophisticated analytical and computational techniques, and the findings have profoundly impacted the search for life beyond Earth. Yet life's very beginnings during the first hundreds of millions of years of our planet's history remain largely unknown--despite decades of research. This report centers on one key point: that the earliest steps on the path to life's emergence on Earth were tied intimately to the evolving chemical and physical conditions of our earliest environments. Yet, a rigorous, interdisciplinary understanding of that relationship has not been explored adequately and once better understood will inform our search for life beyond Earth. In this way, studies of the emergence of life must become a truly interdisciplinary effort, requiring a mix that expands the traditional platform of prebiotic chemistry to include geochemists, atmospheric chemists, geologists and geophysicists, astronomers, mission scientists and engineers, and astrobiologists.
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