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{{short description |Hypothesis on the interstellar spreading of primordial life}}
]
{{About|the fringe theory that life permeates the universe and gave rise to life on Earth|the mainstream hypothesis that the organic building-blocks of life originated in space|Pseudo-panspermia}}
'''Panspermia''' ({{lang-el|πανσπερμία from πᾶς/πᾶν (''pas''/pan) "all" and σπέρμα (''sperma'') "seed"}}) is the ] that ] exists throughout the ], distributed by ],], ] and ].<ref>Rampelotto, P. H. (2010). Panspermia: A promising field of research. In: Astrobiology Science Conference. Abs 5224.</ref>
]s such as ], complete with their ], could be transported by means such as ]s through space to planets including ].]]
'''Panspermia''' ({{ety|grc|''πᾶν'' (pan)|all||''σπέρμα'' (sperma)|seed}}) is the ] that ] exists throughout the ], distributed by ],<ref name="ARX-20171106">{{cite journal |last=Berera |first=Arjun |title=Space dust collisions as a planetary escape mechanism |journal=Astrobiology |volume=17 |issue=12 |pages=1274–1282 |date=6 November 2017 |arxiv=1711.01895 |bibcode=2017AsBio..17.1274B |doi=10.1089/ast.2017.1662 |pmid=29148823 |s2cid=126012488 }}</ref> ]s,<ref name="SA-20180110">{{cite journal |last=Chan |first=Queenie H. S. |display-authors=etal |title=Organic matter in extraterrestrial water-bearing salt crystals |date=10 January 2018 |journal=] |volume=4 |pages=eaao3521 |issue=1 |doi=10.1126/sciadv.aao3521 |pmid=29349297 |pmc=5770164 |bibcode=2018SciA....4.3521C }}</ref> ]s, ]s,<ref name="cometary panspermia">{{cite journal |last=Wickramasinghe |first=Chandra |title=Bacterial morphologies supporting cometary panspermia: a reappraisal |journal=International Journal of Astrobiology |date=2011 |volume=10 |issue=1 |pages=25–30 |doi=10.1017/S1473550410000157 |bibcode=2011IJAsB..10...25W |citeseerx=10.1.1.368.4449 |s2cid=7262449}}</ref> and ],<ref>{{cite journal |last=Rampelotto |first=P. H. |year=2010 |title=Panspermia: A promising field of research |journal=Astrobiology Science Conference |volume=1538 |page=5224 |bibcode=2010LPICo1538.5224R |url=http://www.lpi.usra.edu/meetings/abscicon2010/pdf/5224.pdf}}</ref> as well as by ] carrying unintended ] by ]s,<ref name="NAT-20140519">Forward planetary contamination like '']'', that has shown resistance to methods usually used in ]: {{cite journal |last=Madhusoodanan |first=Jyoti |title=Microbial stowaways to Mars identified |date=May 19, 2014 |journal=] |doi=10.1038/nature.2014.15249 |s2cid=87409424 }}</ref><ref name="NASA-20131106">{{cite news |url=http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/news.php?release=2013-319 |title=Rare New Microbe Found in Two Distant Clean Rooms |work=].gov |first=Guy |last=Webster |date=November 6, 2013 |access-date=November 6, 2013}}</ref><ref name="PHYS-20180227">{{cite web |author=Staff – ] |title=Tesla in space could carry bacteria from Earth |url=https://phys.org/news/2018-02-tesla-space-bacteria-earth.html |date=27 February 2018 |work=] |access-date=28 February 2018 }}</ref> known as ]. The theory argues that life did not originate on Earth, but instead evolved somewhere else and seeded life as we know it.


It proposes that life forms that can survive the effects of space, such as ]s, become trapped in debris that is ejected into space after collisions between planets that harbor life and ] (SSSB). Microbes may travel dormant for an extended amount of time before colliding randomly with other planets or intermingling with ]s. If met with ideal conditions on a new planet's surfaces, or inside a watery comet, the microbe becomes active and the process of ] begins. Panspermia is not meant to address ], just the method that may cause its sustenance and propagation.<ref name= "Wesson">A variation of the panspermia hypothesis is '''necropanspermia''' which is described by astronomer Paul Wesson as follows: "The vast majority of organisms reach a new home in the Milky Way in a technically dead state ... Resurrection may, however, be possible." {{Cite news|last=Grossman |first=Lisa |title = All Life on Earth Could Have Come From Alien Zombies |publisher='']'' |date=2010-11-10 |url=http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2010/11/necropanspermia/|accessdate=2010-11-10}}</ref>{{citation needed|date=July 2012}} Panspermia comes in many forms, such as radiopanspermia, lithopanspermia, and ]. Regardless of its form, the theories generally propose that microbes able to survive in ] (such as certain types of bacteria or plant spores<ref name=":14">{{Cite journal |last=Tepfer |first=David |date=December 2008 |title=The origin of life, panspermia and a proposal to seed the Universe |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.plantsci.2008.08.007 |journal=Plant Science |volume=175 |issue=6 |pages=756–760 |doi=10.1016/j.plantsci.2008.08.007 |bibcode=2008PlnSc.175..756T |issn=0168-9452}}</ref>) can become trapped in ] into space after collisions between planets and ] that harbor life.<ref name="TNY-20190708">{{cite magazine |last=Chotiner |first=Isaac |date=8 July 2019 |title=What If Life Did Not Originate on Earth? |url=https://www.newyorker.com/news/q-and-a/what-if-life-did-not-originate-on-earth |magazine=] |access-date=10 July 2019}}</ref> This debris containing the lifeforms is then transported by meteors between bodies in a solar system, or even across solar systems within a galaxy. In this way, panspermia studies concentrate not on how life began but on methods that may distribute it within the Universe.<ref name="Wesson">A variation of the panspermia hypothesis is '''necropanspermia''' which astronomer Paul Wesson describes as follows: "The vast majority of organisms reach a new home in the Milky Way in a technically dead state Resurrection may, however, be possible." {{cite magazine |last=Grossman |first=Lisa |date=2010-11-10 |title=All Life on Earth Could Have Come From Alien Zombies |url=https://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2010/11/necropanspermia/ |magazine=] |access-date=10 November 2010}}</ref><ref name="Hoyle, F 1981. pp35-49">Hoyle, F. and Wickramasinghe, N.C. (1981). ''Evolution from Space''. Simon & Schuster, New York, and J.M. Dent and Son, London (1981), ch. 3 pp. 35–49.</ref><ref name="Wickramasinghe, J. 2010. pp. 137-154">Wickramasinghe, J., Wickramasinghe, C. and Napier, W. (2010). . World Scientific, Singapore. ch. 6 pp. 137–154. {{ISBN|978-9812566355}}</ref> This point is often used as a criticism of the theory.


Panspermia is a ] with little support amongst mainstream scientists.<ref name="May 2019">{{cite book |last=May |first=Andrew |title=Astrobiology: The Search for Life Elsewhere in the Universe |date=2019 |isbn=978-1785783425 |location=London |publisher=Icon Books |oclc=999440041 |quote=Although they were part of the scientific establishment—Hoyle at Cambridge and Wickramasinghe at the University of Wales—their views on the topic were far from mainstream, and panspermia remains a fringe theory}}</ref> Critics argue that it does not answer the question of the ] but merely places it on another celestial body. It is further criticized because it cannot be tested experimentally. Historically, disputes over the merit of this theory centered on whether life is ubiquitous or emergent throughout the Universe.<ref name=":04">{{Cite journal |last=Kamminga |first=Harmke |date=January 1982 |title=Life from space — A history of panspermia |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0083-6656(82)90001-0 |journal=Vistas in Astronomy |volume=26 |issue=2 |pages=67–86 |doi=10.1016/0083-6656(82)90001-0 |bibcode=1982VA.....26...67K |issn=0083-6656}}</ref> The theory maintains support today, with some work being done to develop mathematical treatments of how life might migrate naturally throughout the Universe.<ref name=":24">{{Cite journal |last=Burchell |first=M.J. |date=April 2004 |title=Panspermia today |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1473550404002113 |journal=International Journal of Astrobiology |volume=3 |issue=2 |pages=73–80 |doi=10.1017/s1473550404002113 |bibcode=2004IJAsB...3...73B |s2cid=232248983 |issn=1473-5504}}</ref><ref name=":33">{{Cite journal |last1=Lingam |first1=Manasvi |last2=Loeb |first2=Abraham |date=2017-06-13 |title=Enhanced interplanetary panspermia in the TRAPPIST-1 system |journal=Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences |volume=114 |issue=26 |pages=6689–6693 |doi=10.1073/pnas.1703517114 |pmid=28611223 |pmc=5495259 |issn=0027-8424 |doi-access=free |arxiv=1703.00878 |bibcode=2017PNAS..114.6689L }}</ref> Its long history lends itself to extensive speculation and hoaxes that have arisen from meteoritic events.
So Panspermia addresses the processes by which "Life is a Cosmic Phenomenon" and how life has spread across the galaxy.


In contrast, ] is the well-supported hypothesis that many of the small ]s used for ] originated in space, and were distributed to ]ary surfaces.
As a corollary, Panspermia proposes that life on Earth (and any life on other planets and ]) was 'seeded' from space rather than arising through abiogenesis on that planet.


== History ==
For clarification, the related but distinct idea of 'exogenesis' ({{lang-el|ἔξω (''exo'', "outside") and γένεσις (''genesis'', "origin")}}) is a more limited hypothesis that proposes life on Earth was transferred from elsewhere in the Universe but makes no prediction about how widespread it is.


Panspermia has a long history, dating back to the 5th century BCE and the natural philosopher ].<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Hollinger |first=Maik |date=2016 |title=Life from Elsewhere – Early History of the Maverick Theory of Panspermia |url=https://www.biblioscout.net/article/10.25162/sudhoff-2016-0009 |journal=Sudhoffs Archiv |language=de |volume=100 |issue=2 |pages=188–205 |doi=10.25162/sudhoff-2016-0009 |pmid=29668166 |s2cid=4942706 |issn=0039-4564}}</ref> Classicists came to agree that Anaxagoras maintained the Universe (or Cosmos) was full of life, and that life on Earth started from the fall of these extra-terrestrial seeds.<ref name=":44">{{Cite journal |last=Mitton |first=Simon |date=2022-12-01 |title=A Short History of Panspermia from Antiquity Through the Mid-1970s |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/ast.2022.0032 |journal=Astrobiology |volume=22 |issue=12 |pages=1379–1391 |doi=10.1089/ast.2022.0032 |pmid=36475958 |bibcode=2022AsBio..22.1379M |s2cid=254444999 |issn=1531-1074}}</ref> Panspermia as it is known today, however, is not identical to this original theory. The name, as applied to this theory, was only first coined in 1908 by ], a Swedish scientist.<ref name=":04"/><ref name=":103">{{Cite journal |last1=Arrhenius |first1=Svante |last2=Borns |first2=H. |date=1909 |title=Worlds in the Making. The Evolution of the Universe |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/200804 |journal=Bulletin of the American Geographical Society |volume=41 |issue=2 |pages=123 |doi=10.2307/200804 |jstor=200804 |hdl=2027/hvd.hnu57r |issn=0190-5929|hdl-access=free }}</ref> Prior to this, since around the 1860s, many prominent scientists were becoming interested in the theory, for example ], and ].<ref name=":9">{{Cite journal |last=Napier |first=W.M. |date=2007-04-16 |title=Pollination of exoplanets by nebulae |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1473550407003710 |journal=International Journal of Astrobiology |volume=6 |issue=3 |pages=223–228 |doi=10.1017/s1473550407003710 |bibcode=2007IJAsB...6..223N |s2cid=122742509 |issn=1473-5504}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last=Line |first=M.A. |date=July 2007 |title=Panspermia in the context of the timing of the origin of life and microbial phylogeny |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1473550407003813 |journal=International Journal of Astrobiology |volume=6 |issue=3 |pages=249–254 |doi=10.1017/s1473550407003813 |bibcode=2007IJAsB...6..249L |s2cid=86569201 |issn=1473-5504}}</ref>
==Hypothesis==
The first known mention of the term was in the writings of the 5th century BC ] philosopher ].<ref>Margaret O'Leary (2008) Anaxagoras and the Origin of Panspermia Theory, iUniverse publishing Group, # ISBN 978-0-595-49596-2</ref> In the nineteenth century it was again revived in modern form by several scientists, including ] (1834),<ref>{{Cite journal| last = Berzelius (1799-1848) | first = J. J. | title = Analysis of the Alais meteorite and implications about life in other worlds}}</ref> ] (1871),<ref>{{Cite journal| last = Thomson (Lord Kelvin) | first = W. | title = Inaugural Address to the British Association Edinburgh. "We must regard it as probably to the highest degree that there are countless seed-bearing meteoritic stones moving through space." | journal = Nature | volume = 4 | pages = 261–278 | year = 1871 |doi=10.1038/004261a0| issue = 92 |bibcode = 1871Natur...4..261. }}</ref> ] (1879){{Citation needed|date=September 2012}} and, somewhat later, by ] (1903).<ref>Arrhenius, S., ''Worlds in the Making: The Evolution of the Universe''. New York, Harper & Row, 1908.</ref> ] is alleged to have been a proponent.<ref></ref>


In the 1860s, there were three scientific developments that began to bring the focus of the scientific community to the problem of the origin of life.<ref name=":04"/> Firstly, the Kant-Laplace ] of solar system and planetary formation was gaining favor, and implied that when the Earth first formed, the surface conditions would have been inhospitable to life as we know it. This meant that life could not have evolved parallel with the Earth, and must have evolved at a later date, without biological precursors. Secondly, ]'s famous theory of evolution implied some elusive origin, because in order for something to evolve, it must start somewhere. In his ''Origin of Species'', Darwin was unable or unwilling to touch on this issue.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Darwin |first=Charles |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.5962/bhl.title.87899 |title=The variation of animals and plants under domestication / |date=1883 |publisher=D. Appleton and company |location=New York|doi=10.5962/bhl.title.87899 }}</ref> Third and finally, ] and ] experimentally disproved the (now superseded) theory of ], which suggested that life was ''constantly'' evolving from non-living matter and did not have a common ancestor, as suggested by Darwin's theory of evolution.
] (1915–2001) and ] (born 1939) were influential proponents of panspermia. In 1974 they proposed the hypothesis that some dust in interstellar space was largely ] (containing carbon), which Wickramasinghe later proved to be correct.<ref>
Wickramasinghe, D. T. & Allen, D. A. Nature 287, 518−519 (1980).
Allen, D. A. & Wickramasinghe, D. T. Nature 294, 239−240 (1981).
Wickramasinghe, D. T. & Allen, D. A. Astrophys. Space Sci. 97, 369−378 (1983).</ref> Hoyle and Wickramasinghe further contended that life forms continue to enter the Earth's atmosphere, and may be responsible for epidemic outbreaks, new diseases, and the genetic novelty necessary for ].<ref>{{cite book|author=Fred Hoyle, Chandra Wickramasinghe and John Watson| title=Viruses from Space and Related Matters| publisher=University College Cardiff Press| year=1986}}</ref> In a virtual presentation on April 7, 2009, physicist ] endorsed the hypothesis.<ref>{{cite news | first = Rheyanne Weaver | title = Ruminations on other worlds | date = April 7, 2009 | url = http://www.statepress.com/archive/node/5745 | work = StatePress.com | accessdate = 2012-10-10}}</ref>


Altogether, these three developments in science presented the wider scientific community with a seemingly paradoxical situation regarding the origin of life: life must have evolved from non-biological precursors after the Earth was formed, and yet spontaneous generation as a theory had been experimentally disproved. From here, is where the study of the origin of life branched. Those who accepted Pasteur's rejection of spontaneous generation began to develop the theory that under (unknown) conditions on a primitive Earth, life must have gradually evolved from organic material. This theory became known as ], and is the currently accepted one. On the other side of this are those scientists of the time who rejected Pasteur's results and instead supported the idea that life on Earth came from existing life. This necessarily requires that life has always existed somewhere on some planet, and that it has a mechanism of transferring between planets. Thus, the modern treatment of panspermia began in earnest.
Panspermia does not necessarily suggest that life originated only once and subsequently spread through the entire Universe, but instead that once started, it may be able to spread to other environments suitable for replication. There is as yet no evidence to support or contradict panspermia, although the majority view holds that panspermia &ndash; especially in its interstellar form &ndash; is unlikely given the challenges of survival and transport in space.{{citation needed |date=May 2013}}


], in a presentation to The British Association for the Advancement of Science in 1871, proposed the idea that similarly to how seeds can be transferred through the air by winds, so can life be brought to Earth by the infall of a life-bearing meteorite.<ref name=":04"/> He further proposed the idea that life can only come from life, and that this principle is invariant under philosophical ], similar to how matter can ].<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Thompson |first=W. |date=1871-10-01 |title=Inaugural address before the British Association at Edinburgh, August 2d. |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.2475/ajs.s3-2.10.269 |journal=American Journal of Science |volume=s3-2 |issue=10 |pages=269–294 |doi=10.2475/ajs.s3-2.10.269 |s2cid=131738509 |issn=0002-9599}}</ref> This argument was heavily criticized because of its boldness, and additionally due to technical objections from the wider community. In particular, Johann Zollner from Germany argued against Kelvin by saying that organisms carried in meteorites to Earth would not survive the descent through the atmosphere due to friction heating.<ref name=":04"/><ref>{{Cite journal |last=Hollinger |first=Maik |date=2016 |title=Life from Elsewhere – Early History of the Maverick Theory of Panspermia |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.25162/sudhoff-2016-0009 |journal=Sudhoffs Archiv |volume=100 |issue=2 |pages=188–205 |doi=10.25162/sudhoff-2016-0009 |pmid=29668166 |s2cid=4942706 |issn=0039-4564}}</ref>
===Proposed mechanisms===
The mechanisms proposed for interstellar panspermia are hypothetical and currently unproven. Panspermia can be said to be either interstellar (between ]s) or interplanetary (between ]); its transport mechanisms may include ] and lithopanspermia (microorganisms in rocks).<ref>{{Cite journal| last = Weber | first = P | last2 = Greenberg| title =Can spores survive in interstellar space? | journal = Nature | volume = 316 | pages = 403–407 | year = 1985| doi =10.1038/316403a0|first2 = J. M. |bibcode = 1985Natur.316..403W | issue=6027}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal| last = Melosh | first = H. J. | title = The rocky road to panspermia | journal = Nature | volume = 332 | pages = 687–688 | year = 1988 | doi = 10.1038/332687a0 | pmid = 11536601 | issue = 6166 |bibcode = 1988Natur.332..687M }}</ref><ref name=Mileikowsky>{{cite journal| title = Risks threatening viable transfer of microbes between bodies in our solar system | author = C. Mileikowsky, F. A. Cucinotta, J. W. Wilson, B. Gladman, G. Horneck, L. Lindegren, J. Melosh, Hans Rickman, M. Valtonen, J. Q. Zheng | journal = Planetary and Space Science| year = 2000| volume = 48| issue = 11 | pages = 1107–1115 | doi = 10.1016/S0032-0633(00)00085-4 | bibcode=2000P&SS...48.1107M}}</ref> Interplanetary transfer of material is well documented, as evidenced by ] found on Earth.<ref name=Mileikowsky/> ]s may also be a viable transport mechanism for interplanetary cross-pollination in our Solar System or even beyond. However, space agencies have implemented ] procedures to reduce the risk of planetary contamination.<ref></ref><ref></ref> Deliberate directed panspermia from space to seed Earth<ref name="Crick_Orgel">{{Cite journal| last = Crick | first = F. H. | last2 = Orgel | first2 = L. E.| title = Directed Panspermia | journal = Icarus | volume = 19 | pages = 341–348 | year = 1973| doi = 10.1016/0019-1035(73)90110-3+ }}</ref> or sent from Earth to seed other solar systems have also been proposed.<ref>{{Cite book | last = Mautner | first = Michael N. | title = Seeding the Universe with Life: Securing Our Cosmological Future | publisher = Legacy Books (www.amazon.com) | location = Washington D. C. | year = 2000 | isbn = 0-476-00330-X | url = http://www.astro-ecology.com/PDFSeedingtheUniverse2005Book.pdf }}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal| last = Mautner | first = M | last2 = Matloff | title = Directed panspermia: A technical evaluation of seeding nearby solar systems | journal = J. British Interplanetary Soc. | volume = 32 | pages = 419 | year = 1979|first2 = G. | url=http://www.astro-ecology.com/PDFDirectedPanspermia1JBIS1979Paper.pdf }}</ref><ref name="autogenerated1">{{Cite journal| last = Mautner | first = M. N. | title = Directed panspermia. 3. Strategies and motivation for seeding star-forming clouds | journal = J. British Interplanetary Soc. | volume = 50 | pages = 93–102 | year = 1997 | url=http://www.astro-ecology.com/PDFDirectedPanspermia3JBIS1997Paper.pdf }}</ref><ref name="BBC-2011">{{cite web |author=BBC Staff |title=Impacts 'more likely' to have spread life from Earth |url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-14637109 |date=23 August 2011 |publisher=] |accessdate=2011-08-24}}</ref> One twist to the hypothesis by engineer Thomas Dehel (2006), proposes that ] magnetic fields ejected from the ] may move the few spores lifted from the Earth's atmosphere with sufficient speed to cross interstellar space to other systems before the spores can be destroyed.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://space.newscientist.com/article/dn9601-electromagnetic-space-travel-for-bugs.html |title=Electromagnetic space travel for bugs? - space - 21 July 2006 - New Scientist Space |publisher=Space.newscientist.com |date= |accessdate=2009-08-20}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |title=Uplift and Outflow of Bacterial Spores via Electric Field |publisher=Adsabs.harvard.edu |date=2006-07-23|bibcode=2006cosp...36....1D |author1=Dehel |first1=T. |volume=36 |pages=1 |journal=36th COSPAR Scientific Assembly. Held 16–23 July 2006|arxiv = hep-ph/0612311 }}</ref> In 2012 mathematician ] and astronomers Amaya Moro-Martín and Renu Malhotra proposed that gravitational ] of rocks among the young planets of stars in their ] is commonplace, and not rare in the general galactic stellar population.<ref name='Belbruno2012'> {{cite journal | title = Chaotic Exchange of Solid Material between Planetary | journal = Astrobiology | date = 2012 | first = Edward Belbruno | coauthors = Amaya Moro-Martı´n, Renu Malhotra, and Dmitry Savransky | volume = 12 | issue = 8 | doi = 10.1089/ast.2012.0825 | url = http://www.edbelbruno.com/Belbruno-Lithopanspermia_Origin_of_Life%282012%29.pdf | format = PDF | accessdate = 2013-06-19}}</ref><ref> News at Princeton, Sep 24, 2012</ref>


The arguments went back and forth until Svante Arrhenius gave the theory its modern treatment and designation. Arrhenius argued against abiogenesis on the basis that it had no experimental foundation at the time, and believed that life had always existed somewhere in the Universe.<ref name=":103"/> He focused his efforts of developing the mechanism(s) by which this pervasive life may be transferred through the Universe. At this time, it was recently discovered that solar radiation can exert pressure, and thus force, on matter. Arrhenius thus concluded that it is possible that very small organisms such as bacterial spores could be moved around due to this ].<ref name=":103"/>
==Research==
Until a large portion of the galaxy is surveyed for signs of life or contact is made with hypothetical extraterrestrial civilizations, the panspermia hypothesis in its fullest meaning will remain difficult to test.{{citation needed|date=July 2012}}


At this point, panspermia as a theory now had a potentially viable transport mechanism, as well as a vehicle for carrying life from planet to planet. The theory still faced criticism mostly due to doubts about how long spores would actually survive under the conditions of their transport from one planet, through space, to another.<ref name=":112">{{Cite journal |last=Sagan |first=Carl |date=August 1961 |title=On the Origin and Planetary Distribution of Life |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3571249 |journal=Radiation Research |volume=15 |issue=2 |pages=174–192 |doi=10.2307/3571249 |jstor=3571249 |bibcode=1961RadR...15..174S |issn=0033-7587}}</ref> Despite all the emphasis placed on trying to establish the scientific legitimacy of this theory, it still lacked testability; that was and still is a serious problem the theory has yet to overcome.
===Early life on Earth===
] ] in the Siyeh Formation, ]. It is in formations such as this that 3.5 billion year old ] ] microbes, the earliest known life on Earth, were discovered.]]


Support for the theory persisted, however, with ] and ] using two reasons for why an extra-terrestrial origin of life might be preferred. First is that required conditions for the origin of life may have been more favorable somewhere other than Earth, and second that life on Earth exhibits properties that are not accounted for by assuming an ] origin.<ref name=":04"/><ref name=":9" /> Hoyle studied spectra of interstellar dust, and came to the conclusion that space contained large amounts of organics, which he suggested were the building blocks of the more complex chemical structures.<ref>{{Citation |last1=Hoyle |first1=Fred |title=Comets - A Vehicle for Panspermia |date=1981 |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-009-8528-5_15 |work=Comets and the Origin of Life |pages=227–239 |access-date=2023-12-08 |place=Dordrecht |publisher=Springer Netherlands |isbn=978-94-009-8530-8 |last2=Wickramasinghe |first2=Chandra|doi=10.1007/978-94-009-8528-5_15 }}</ref> Critically, Hoyle argued that this chemical evolution was unlikely to have taken place on a prebiotic Earth, and instead the most likely candidate is a comet.<ref name=":04"/> Furthermore, Hoyle and Wickramasinghe concluded that the evolution of life requires a large increase in genetic information and diversity, which might have resulted from the influx of viral material from space via comets.<ref name=":9" /> Hoyle reported (in a lecture at Oxford on January 16, 1978) a pattern of coincidence between the arrival of major epidemics and the occasions of close encounters with comets, which lead Hoyle to suggest<ref>{{cite journal
The ] ] record indicates that life appeared soon after the Earth was formed. This would imply that life appeared within several hundred million years when conditions became favourable. Generally accepted scientific estimates of the ] place its formation (along with the rest of the ]) at about 4.55 billion years old. The oldest known ]s are somewhat altered ] formations from the southern tip of ], West ]. These rocks have been dated as no younger than 3.85 billion years.<ref name="Schidlowski 1988">{{Cite journal |author=Schidlowski, M. |title=A 3,800-Million-Year Isotopic Record Of Life From Carbon In Sedimentary-Rocks |journal=Nature |volume=333 |issue=6171 |pages=313–318 |year=1988 |month=May |doi=10.1038/333313a0 |bibcode = 1988Natur.333..313S }}</ref><ref name="Gilmour & Wright 1997">Gilmour I, Wright I, Wright J 'Origins of Earth and Life', The Open University, 1997, ISBN 0-7492-8182-0</ref><ref name="Nisbet 2000">{{Cite journal|author=Nisbet E |title=The realms of Archaean life |journal=Nature |volume=405 |issue=6787 |pages=625–6 |year=2000 |month=June |pmid=10864305 |doi=10.1038/35015187 }}</ref><ref name="Lepland 2005">Lepland A, van Zuilen M, Arrhenius G, Whitehouse M and Fedo C, Questioning the evidence for Earth's earliest life — Akilia revisited, Geology; January 2005; v. 33; no. 1; p. 77-79; {{doi|10.1130/G20890.1}}</ref>
| last = Hoyle
| first = Fred
| title = COMETS—A MATTER OF LIFE AND DEATH
| url = https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/0083665680900276
| journal = Vistas in Astronomy
| date = 1980
| volume = 24
| pages = 123–139
| doi = 10.1016/0083-6656(80)90027-6
| quote = a lecture in the spirit of those wild old sessions at the R.A.S., a lecture with which most of you in this audience will quite likely disagree.
}}</ref> that the epidemics were a direct result of material raining down from these comets.<ref name=":04"/> This claim in particular garnered criticism from biologists.


Since the 1970s, a new era of planetary exploration meant that data could be used to test panspermia and potentially transform it from conjecture to a testable theory. Though it has yet to be tested, panspermia is still explored today in some mathematical treatments,<ref name=":62">{{Cite journal |last1=Ginsburg |first1=Idan |last2=Lingam |first2=Manasvi |last3=Loeb |first3=Abraham |date=2018-11-19 |title=Galactic Panspermia |journal=The Astrophysical Journal |volume=868 |issue=1 |pages=L12 |doi=10.3847/2041-8213/aaef2d |issn=2041-8213 |doi-access=free |arxiv=1810.04307 |bibcode=2018ApJ...868L..12G }}</ref><ref name=":33"/><ref name=":24"/> and as its long history suggests, the appeal of the theory has stood the test of time.
The oldest known fossilized ]s or ]l aggregates, are dated at 3.5 billion years old. The bacteria that form stromatolites, ], are photosynthetic. Most models of the ] have the earliest organisms obtaining energy from ] chemicals, with the more complex mechanisms of photosynthesis evolving later. During the ] of the Earth's ] about 3.9 billion years (as evidenced by ] lunar samples) impact intensities may have been up to 100x those immediately before.<ref name=Cohen00>{{Cite journal|author=Cohen BA, Swindle TD, Kring DA |title=Support for the lunar cataclysm hypothesis from lunar meteorite impact melt ages |journal=Science |volume=290 |issue=5497 |pages=1754–6 |year=2000 |month=December |pmid=11099411 |url=http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/pmidlookup?view=long&pmid=11099411 |doi=10.1126/science.290.5497.1754|bibcode = 2000Sci...290.1754C }}</ref> From analysis of lunar melts and observations of similar cratering on ], Kring and Cohen suggest that the Late Heavy Bombardment was caused by ] impacts that affected the entire inner ].<ref name="Kring 2002">Kring DA, Cohen BA (2002) Cataclysmic bombardment throughout the inner solar system 3.9-4.0 Ga. J GEOPHYS RES-PLANET 107 (E2): art. no. 5009</ref> This is likely to have effectively ] Earth's entire planetary surface, including submarine ] that would be otherwise protected.<ref name=Cohen00/>


===Extremophiles=== == Overview ==
{{Main|Extremophile}}
] are particularly interested in studying ]s as many organisms of this type are capable of surviving in environments similar to those known to exist on other planets. Some organisms have been shown to be more resistant to extreme conditions than previously recognized, and may be able to survive for very long periods of time, probably even in deep space and, hypothetically, could travel in a dormant state between environments suitable for ongoing ].<ref name='Belbruno2012'/>


=== Core requirements ===
Some bacteria and animals have been found to thrive in oceanic ] above 100 ]; a study revealed that a fraction of bacteria survive heating pulses up to 250°C in vacuo, while similar heating at normal atmospheric pressure leads to the total sterilization of samples.<ref>{{Cite journal|author=Pavlov AK, Shelegedin VN, Kogan VT, Pavlov AA, Vdovina MA, Tret'iakov AV |title= |language=Russian |journal=Biofizika |volume=52 |issue=6 |pages=1136–40 |year=2007 |pmid=18225667 }}</ref> Other bacteria can thrive in strongly ] ]s, others at extreme pressures 11&nbsp;km under the ocean,<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/4235979.stm |title=Science/Nature &#124; Life flourishes at crushing depth |publisher=BBC News |date=2005-02-04 |accessdate=2009-08-20}}</ref> while others survive in extremely dry, desiccating conditions, frigid cold, vacuum or acid environments. Survival in space is not limited to bacteria, lichens or archea:<ref name=Foton /><ref name=Foton-M3/> the animal ] has been proven to survive the vacuum of space.<ref name=Tardigrades />


Panspermia requires:
Experiments suggest that if bacteria were somehow sheltered from the radiation of space, perhaps inside a thick meteoroid or an icy comet, they could survive dormant for millions of years. '']'' is a ] bacterium that can survive high radiation levels.
Duplicating the harsh conditions of cold interstellar space in their laboratory, NASA scientists have created primitive ] that mimic some aspects of the membraneous structures found in all living things. These chemical compounds may have played a part in the origin of life.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://astrobio.net/news/modules.php?op=modload&name=News&file=article&sid=122&mode=thread&order=0&thold=0 |title=Scientists Find Clues That Life Began in Deep Space :: Astrobiology Magazine - Earth science - evolution distribution Origin of life universe - life beyond |publisher=Astrobio.net |date= |accessdate=2009-08-20}}</ref>


# that life has always existed in the Universe somewhere<ref name=":44"/>
In 1995 scientists at ] reported reviving bacteria that had been dormant for 25 million years.<ref> Digital Center for Microbial Ecology</ref>
# that organic molecules originated in space (perhaps to be distributed to Earth)<ref name=":04"/>
# that life originated from these molecules, extraterrestrially<ref name=":14"/>
# that this extraterrestrial life was transported to Earth.<ref name=":103"/>


The creation and distribution of organic molecules from space is now uncontroversial; it is known as ]. The jump from organic materials to life originating from space, however, is hypothetical and currently untestable.
On 26 April 2012, scientists reported that ] survived and showed remarkable results on the ] of ] within the ] of 34 days under ] in the Mars Simulation Laboratory (MSL) maintained by the ] (DLR).<ref name="Skymania-20120426">{{cite web |last=Baldwin |first=Emily |title=Lichen survives harsh Mars environment |url=http://www.skymania.com/wp/2012/04/lichen-survives-harsh-martian-setting.html |date=26 April 2012 |publisher=Skymania News |accessdate=27 April 2012 }}</ref><ref name="EGU-20120426">{{cite web |last1=de Vera |first1=J.-P. |last2=Kohler |first2=Ulrich |title=The adaptation potential of extremophiles to Martian surface conditions and its implication for the habitability of Mars |url=http://media.egu2012.eu/media/filer_public/2012/04/05/10_solarsystem_devera.pdf |date=26 April 2012 |publisher=] |accessdate=27 April 2012 }}</ref>


=== Transport vessels ===
On 17 March 2013, researchers reported data that suggested ] thrive in the ], the deepest spot on the Earth.<ref name="LS-20130317">{{cite web |last=Choi |first=Charles Q. |title=Microbes Thrive in Deepest Spot on Earth |url=http://www.livescience.com/27954-microbes-mariana-trench.html |date=17 March 2013|publisher=] |accessdate=17 March 2013 }}</ref><ref name="NG-20130317">{{cite journal |last1=Glud|first1=Ronnie |last2=Wenzhöfer |first2=Frank |last3=Middleboe |first3=Mathias |last4=Oguri |first4=Kazumasa|last5=Turnewitsch |first5=Robert |last6=Canfield |first6=Donald E. |last7=Kitazato |first7=Hiroshi |title=High rates of microbial carbon turnover in sediments in the deepest oceanic trench on Earth|url=http://www.nature.com/ngeo/journal/vaop/ncurrent/full/ngeo1773.html |doi=10.1038/ngeo1773 |date=17 March 2013 |journal=] |accessdate=17 March 2013 }}</ref> Other researchers reported related studies that microbes thrive inside rocks up to 1900 feet below the sea floor under 8500 feet of ocean off the coast of the northwestern United States.<ref name="LS-20130317" /><ref name="LS-20130314">{{cite web |last=Oskin|first=Becky |title=Intraterrestrials: Life Thrives in Ocean Floor|url=http://www.livescience.com/27899-ocean-subsurface-ecosystem-found.html |date=14 March 2013|publisher=] |accessdate=17 March 2013 }}</ref> According to one of the researchers,"You can find microbes everywhere — they're extremely adaptable to conditions, and survive wherever they are."<ref name="LS-20130317" />
Bacterial spores and plant seeds are two common proposed vessels for panspermia. According to the theory, they could be encased in a meteorite and transported to another planet from their origin, subsequently descend through the atmosphere and populate the surface with life (see lithopanspermia below). This naturally requires that these spores and seeds have formed somewhere else, maybe even in space in the case of how panspermia deals with bacteria. Understanding of planetary formation theory and meteorites has led to the idea that some rocky bodies originating from undifferentiated parent bodies could be able to generate local conditions conducive to life.<ref name=":24"/> Hypothetically, internal heating from ] could melt ice to provide water as well as energy. In fact, some meteorites have been found to show signs of aqueous alteration which may indicate that this process has taken place.<ref name=":24"/> Given that there are such large numbers of these bodies found within the Solar System, an argument can be made that they each provide a potential site for life to develop. A collision occurring in the ] could alter the orbit of one such site, and eventually deliver it to Earth.


Plant seeds can be an alternative transport vessel. Some plants produce seeds that are resistant to the conditions of space,<ref name=":14"/> which have been shown to lie dormant in extreme cold, vacuum, and resist short wavelength UV radiation.<ref name=":14"/> They are not typically proposed to have originated on space, but on another planet. Theoretically, even if a plant is partially damaged during its travel in space, the pieces could still seed life in a sterile environment.<ref name=":14"/> Sterility of the environment is relevant because it is unclear if the novel plant could out-compete existing life forms. This idea is based on previous evidence showing that cellular reconstruction can occur from cytoplasms released from damaged algae.<ref name=":14"/> Furthermore, plant cells contain obligate ]s, which could be released into a new environment.
On 29 April 2013, French scientists reported that, during ] inside the ], '']'' ] seem to adapt to ]. The bacteria increased the number of viable cells, ], and thickness. Moreover, the biofilms formed during spaceflight exhibited a column-and-canopy structure that has not been observed on Earth.<ref name="PLos-20130429">{{cite journal |author=Tengra FK et al. |title=Spaceflight Promotes Biofilm Formation by Pseudomonas aeruginosa |url=http://www.plosone.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0062437 |date=29 April 2013 |journal=] |volume=8 |issue=4 |page=e6237 |doi=10.1371/journal.pone.0062437 |accessdate=5 July 2013 }}</ref>


Though both plant seeds and bacterial spores have been proposed as potentially viable vehicles, their ability to not only survive in space for the required time, but also survive atmospheric entry is debated.
===Spores===
] are another potential vector for transporting life through inhospitable and inimical environments, such as the depths of interstellar space.<ref> July 2008.</ref><ref>. 25 November 2002.</ref> Spores are produced as part of the normal life cycle of many ]s, ], ] and some ]s, and some bacteria produce ] or ] during times of stress. These structures may be highly resilient to ] and ], ], ], ], ] and chemical ], while ] inactive. Spores ] when favourable conditions are restored after exposure to conditions fatal to the parent organism. Although computer models suggest that a captured meteoroid would typically take some tens of millions of years before collision with a neighboring solar system planet,<ref name='Belbruno2012'/> there are documented viable Earthly bacterial spores that are 40 million years old that are very resistant to radiation,<ref name='Belbruno2012'/><ref name="BBC-2011"/> suggesting that lithopanspermia life-transfers are possible via meteorites exceeding 1m in size.<ref name='Belbruno2012'/> Similarly, from the point of view of dynamical transport efficiency, life-bearing extrasolar asteroids could have been delivered to the ] via the weak transfer mechanism if life had a sufficiently early start in other planetary systems.<ref name='Belbruno2012'/>


]s may be a viable transport mechanism for interplanetary cross-pollination within the Solar System. Space agencies have implemented ] procedures to reduce the risk of planetary contamination,<ref>{{cite web |date=July 30, 2000 |title=Studies Focus On Spacecraft Sterilization |url=http://www.aero.org/news/newsitems/sterilization073001.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060502194219/http://www.aero.org/news/newsitems/sterilization073001.html |archive-date=2006-05-02 |publisher=The Aerospace Corporation}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |date=22 May 2006 |title=Dry heat sterilisation process to high temperatures |url=http://www.esa.int/esaMI/Aurora/SEMBJG9ATME_0.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120201224127/http://www.esa.int/esaMI/Aurora/SEMBJG9ATME_0.html |archive-date=2012-02-01 |publisher=European Space Agency}}</ref> but microorganisms such as '']'' may be resistant to ].<ref name="NAT-20140519" /><ref name="NASA-20131106" />
===Potential habitats===
{{Main|Astrobiology|Planetary habitability}}
The presence of past liquid ], suggested by river-like formations on the red planet, was confirmed by the ] missions. In December 2006, ] of ] published a paper in the journal ] which argued that his camera (the Mars Observer Camera) had found evidence suggesting water was occasionally flowing on the surface of Mars within the last five years.


== Variations of panspermia theory ==
Water oceans might exist on ], ], ] and perhaps other moons in the Solar system. Even moons whose surface is mostly frozen ice may earlier have been melted internally by heat from radioactive rocky cores. Bodies like this may be common throughout the universe. Living bacteria found in ice core samples retrieved from {{convert|3700|m|ft}} deep at ] in ], have provided data for extrapolations to the likelihood of microorganisms surviving frozen in extraterrestrial habitats or during interplanetary transport.<ref>{{cite web | url = http://etd.ohiolink.edu/view.cgi?acc_num=osu1015965965 | title = Detection, recovery, isolation, and characterization of bacteria in glacial ice and Lake Vostok accretion ice | accessdate = 2011-02-04 | first = Christner, Brent C. | year = 2002 | work = Ohio State University}}</ref> Also, bacteria have been discovered living within warm rock deep in the Earth's crust.<ref name=Nanjundiah2000>{{Cite journal| last = Nanjundiah | first = V. | year = 2000 | title = The smallest form of life yet? | journal = Journal of Biosciences | volume = 25 | issue = 1 | pages = 9–10 | url = http://eprints.iisc.ernet.in/archive/00001799/01/25smallest25(1)-9to10mar2000.pdf | doi = 10.1007/BF02985175 | pmid = 10824192 | postscript = <!--None-->}}</ref>
] procedures applied to spacecraft in ]s, intended to prevent accidental planetary contamination.<ref name="NAT-20140519"/><ref name="NASA-20131106"/>]]
Panspermia is generally subdivided into two classes: either transfer occurs between planets of the same system (interplanetary) or between stellar systems (interstellar). Further classifications are based on different proposed transport mechanisms, as follows.


===Extraterrestrial life=== ===Radiopanspermia===
In 1903, ] proposed radiopanspermia, the theory that singular microscopic forms of life can be propagated in space, driven by the ] from stars.<ref>{{Citation |title=V. Die Verbreitung des organischen Lebens auf der Erde |date=1885-12-31 |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9783112690987-006 |work=Anthropologische Studien |pages=101–133 |access-date=2023-11-28 |publisher=De Gruyter |doi=10.1515/9783112690987-006 |isbn=978-3-11-269098-7}}</ref> This is the mechanism by which light can exert a force on matter. Arrhenius argued that particles at a critical size below 1.5 μm would be propelled at high speed by radiation pressure of a star.<ref name=":103"/> However, because its effectiveness decreases with increasing size of the particle, this mechanism holds for very tiny particles only, such as single ].
{{Main|Extraterrestrial life}}
] is the only place known by human beings to harbor life in the observed universe, while the sheer number of galaxies make it seem probable that life has arisen somewhere else in the Universe.<ref>See shrinking estimates of parameter values (since its inception in 1961) as discussed throughout the ] article.</ref> According to current theories of physics, space travel over such vast distances would take an incredibly long time to the outside observer, with vast amounts of energy required. Nevertheless, small groups of researchers like the Search for Extra-Terrestrial Intelligence (]) continue to monitor the skies for transmissions from within our own galaxy at least.


==== Counterarguments ====
] proponents like the ]ts claim that the conditions required for the evolution of intelligent life are probably exceedingly rare in the Universe, while simultaneously noting that simple single-celled ] may well be abundant.<ref name="Webb, Stephen 2002">Webb, Stephen, 2002. ''If the universe is teeming with aliens, where is everybody? Fifty solutions to the Fermi paradox and the problem of extraterrestrial life''. Copernicus Books (Springer Verlag)</ref>
The main criticism of radiopanspermia came from ] and ], who cited evidence for the ] (] and ]s) in the cosmos.<ref>{{Citation |title=The Intelligent Universe |date=2020-09-24 |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/9781108873154.026 |work=The Biological Universe |pages=318–334 |access-date=2023-11-28 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |doi=10.1017/9781108873154.026 |isbn=978-1-108-87315-4|s2cid=116975371 }}</ref> If enough of these microorganisms are ejected into space, some may rain down on a planet in a new star system after 10<sup>6</sup> years wandering interstellar space.{{cn|date=September 2024}} There would be enormous death rates of the organisms due to radiation and the generally hostile conditions of space, but nonetheless this theory is considered potentially viable by some.{{cn|date=September 2024}}


Data gathered by the orbital experiments ], ], ] and ] showed that isolated spores, including those of '']'', were rapidly killed if exposed to the full space environment for merely a few seconds, but if shielded against solar ], the spores were capable of surviving in space for up to six years while embedded in clay or meteorite powder (artificial meteorites).<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Horneck |first1=Gerda |last2=Rettberg |first2=Petra |last3=Reitz |first3=Günther |last4=Wehner |first4=Jörg |last5=Eschweiler |first5=Ute |last6=Strauch |first6=Karsten |last7=Panitz |first7=Corinna |last8=Starke |first8=Verena |last9=Baumstark-Khan |first9=Christa |date=2001 |title=Protection of bacterial spores in space, a contribution to the discussion on Panspermia |url=http://link.springer.com/10.1023/A:1012746130771 |journal=Origins of Life and Evolution of the Biosphere |volume=31 |issue=6 |pages=527–547 |doi=10.1023/A:1012746130771|pmid=11770260 |bibcode=2001OLEB...31..527H |s2cid=24304433 }}</ref> Spores would therefore need to be heavily protected against UV radiation: exposure of unprotected DNA ] and ] ] would break it up into its constituent bases.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Patrick |first1=Michael H. |last2=Gray |first2=Donald M. |date=December 1976 |title=INDEPENDENCE OF PHOTOPRODUCT FORMATION ON DNA CONFORMATION* |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1751-1097.1976.tb06867.x |journal=Photochemistry and Photobiology |volume=24 |issue=6 |pages=507–513 |doi=10.1111/j.1751-1097.1976.tb06867.x |pmid=1019243 |s2cid=12711656 |issn=0031-8655}}</ref> Rocks at least 1 meter in diameter are required to effectively shield resistant microorganisms, such as bacterial spores against galactic ].<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Mileikowsky |first=C |date=June 2000 |title=Natural Transfer of Viable Microbes in Space 1. From Mars to Earth and Earth to Mars |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1006/icar.1999.6317 |journal=Icarus |volume=145 |issue=2 |pages=391–427 |doi=10.1006/icar.1999.6317 |pmid=11543506 |bibcode=2000Icar..145..391M |issn=0019-1035}}</ref> Additionally, exposing DNA to the ] of space alone is sufficient to cause ], so the transport of unprotected DNA or ] during ] powered solely by ] is extremely unlikely.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Nicholson |first1=Wayne L. |last2=Schuerger |first2=Andrew C. |last3=Setlow |first3=Peter |date=2005-04-01 |title=The solar UV environment and bacterial spore UV resistance: considerations for Earth-to-Mars transport by natural processes and human spaceflight |url=https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0027510704004981 |journal=Mutation Research/Fundamental and Molecular Mechanisms of Mutagenesis |language=en |volume=571 |issue=1–2 |pages=249–264 |doi=10.1016/j.mrfmmm.2004.10.012|pmid=15748651 |bibcode=2005MRFMM.571..249N }}</ref>
====Spaceborne organic molecules and structures====
A 2008 analysis of <sup>12</sup>C/<sup>13</sup>C isotopic ratios of organic compounds found in the ] indicates a non-terrestrial origin for these molecules rather than terrestrial contamination. Biologically relevant molecules identified so far include ], an RNA ], and ].<ref name='Murch_base'>{{Cite journal |last1=Martins |first1=Zita |last2=Botta |first2=Oliver |last3=Fogel |first3=Marilyn L. |last4=Sephton |first4=Mark A. |last5=Glavin |first5=Daniel P. |last6=Watson |first6=Jonathan S. |last7=Dworkin |first7=Jason P. |last8=Schwartz |first8=Alan W. |last9=Ehrenfreund |first9=Pascale |title=Extraterrestrial nucleobases in the Murchison meteorite |journal=] |date=15 June 2008 |volume=270 |issue=1–2 |pages=130–136 |doi=10.1016/j.epsl.2008.03.026 |url= |format= |bibcode=2008E&PSL.270..130M |arxiv = 0806.2286 }}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |author=] Staff |title=We may all be space aliens: study |date=20 August 2009 |url=http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5j_QHxWNRNdiW35Qr00L8CkwcXyvw |publisher=] |accessdate=2011-08-14 }}</ref> These results demonstrate that many organic compounds which are components of life on Earth were already present in the early Solar System and may have played a key role in life's origin.<ref>{{Cite journal|title=Extraterrestrial nucleobases in the Murchison meteorite|journal=Earth and Planetary Science Letters|date=Available online 20 March 2008|first=Zita|last=Martins|coauthors=Oliver Botta, Marilyn L. Fogel Mark A. Sephton, Daniel P. Glavin, Jonathan S. Watson, Jason P. Dworkin, Alan W. Schwartz, Pascale Ehrenfreund.|volume=|issue=|pages=|id= |url=http://astrobiology.gsfc.nasa.gov/analytical/PDF/Martinsetal2008.pdf|format=PDF|accessdate=2008-10-07 }}</ref>


The feasibility of other means of transport for the more massive shielded spores into the outer Solar System—for example, through gravitational capture by comets—is unknown. There is little evidence in full support of the radiopanspermia hypothesis.
In August 2009, NASA scientists identified one of the fundamental chemical building-blocks of life (the amino acid ]) in a comet for the first time.<ref>{{Cite news| first= | last= | coauthors= |authorlink= | title='Life chemical' detected in comet | date=18 August 2009 | publisher=BBC News | url =http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/8208307.stm | work =] | pages = | accessdate = 2010-03-06 | language = }}</ref>


=== Lithopanspermia ===
On August 8, 2011, a report, based on ] studies with ] found on ], was published suggesting building blocks of ] (], ] and related ]) may have been formed extraterrestrially in ].<ref name="Callahan">{{cite web |last1=Callahan |first1=Michael P. |last2=Smith |first2=K.E. |last3=Cleaves |first3=H.J. |last4=Ruzica |first4=J. |last5=Stern |first5=J.C. |last6=Glavin |first6=D.P. |last7=House |first7=C.H. |last8=Dworkin |first8=J.P. |date=11 August 2011 |title=Carbonaceous meteorites contain a wide range of extraterrestrial nucleobases |url=http://www.pnas.org/content/early/2011/08/10/1106493108 |publisher=] |doi=10.1073/pnas.1106493108 |accessdate=2011-08-15 }}</ref><ref name="Steigerwald">{{cite web |last=Steigerwald |first=John |title=NASA Researchers: DNA Building Blocks Can Be Made in Space|url=http://www.nasa.gov/topics/solarsystem/features/dna-meteorites.html|publisher=] |date=8 August 2011 |accessdate=2011-08-10}}</ref><ref name="DNA">{{cite web |author=ScienceDaily Staff |title=DNA Building Blocks Can Be Made in Space, NASA Evidence Suggests|url=http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/08/110808220659.htm |date=9 August 2011 |publisher=] |accessdate=2011-08-09}}</ref> In October 2011, scientists reported that ] contains complex ] matter ("amorphous organic solids with a mixed ]-] structure") that could be created naturally, and rapidly, by ].<ref name="Space-20111026">{{cite web |last=Chow |first=Denise |title=Discovery: Cosmic Dust Contains Organic Matter from Stars |url=http://www.space.com/13401-cosmic-star-dust-complex-organic-compounds.html |date=26 October 2011 |publisher=] |accessdate=2011-10-26 }}</ref><ref name="ScienceDaily-20111026">{{cite web |author=] Staff |title=Astronomers Discover Complex Organic Matter Exists Throughout the Universe |url=http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/10/111026143721.htm |date=26 October 2011 |publisher=] |accessdate=2011-10-27 }}</ref><ref name="Nature-20111026">{{cite journal |last1=Kwok |first1=Sun |last2=Zhang |first2=Yong |title=Mixed aromatic–aliphatic organic nanoparticles as carriers of unidentified infrared emission features |date=26 October 2011 |journal=] |doi=10.1038/nature10542 |volume=479 |issue=7371 |pages=80 |bibcode=2011Natur.479...80K}}</ref> One of the scientists suggested that these complex organic compounds may have been related to the development of life on Earth and said that, "If this is the case, life on Earth may have had an easier time getting started as these organics can serve as basic ingredients for life."<ref name="Space-20111026"/>
This transport mechanism generally arose following the discovery of exoplanets, and the sudden availability of data following the growth of planetary science.<ref name=":44"/> Lithopanspermia is the proposed transfer of organisms in rocks from one planet to another through planetary objects such as in ]s or ]s, and remains speculative. A variant would be for organisms to travel between star systems on nomadic exoplanets or exomoons.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Sadlok |first=Grzegorz |date=2020-06-01 |title=On A Hypothetical Mechanism of Interstellar Life Transfer Trough Nomadic Objects |journal=Origins of Life and Evolution of Biospheres |language=en |volume=50 |issue=1 |pages=87–96 |doi=10.1007/s11084-020-09591-z |pmid=32034615 |s2cid=211054399 |issn=1573-0875|doi-access=free |bibcode=2020OLEB...50...87S |hdl=20.500.12128/14868 |hdl-access=free }}</ref>


Although there is no concrete evidence that lithopanspermia has occurred in the Solar System, the various stages have become amenable to experimental testing.<ref name=":5">{{Cite journal |last1=Olsson-Francis |first1=Karen |last2=Cockell |first2=Charles S. |date=January 2010 |title=Experimental methods for studying microbial survival in extraterrestrial environments |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.mimet.2009.10.004 |journal=Journal of Microbiological Methods |volume=80 |issue=1 |pages=1–13 |doi=10.1016/j.mimet.2009.10.004 |pmid=19854226 |issn=0167-7012}}</ref>
On August 29, 2012, and in a world first, astronomers at ] reported the detection of a specific sugar molecule, ], in a distant star system. The molecule was found around the ] binary ''IRAS 16293-2422'', which is located 400 light years from Earth.<ref name="NG-20120829">{{cite journal|title=Sugar Found In Space|journal=National Geographic |last=Than |first=Ker |date=August 29, 2012 |url=http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2012/08/120829-sugar-space-planets-science-life/ |accessdate=August 31, 2012 }}</ref><ref name="AP-20120829">{{cite web |author=Staff |title=Sweet! Astronomers spot sugar molecule near star |url=http://apnews.excite.com/article/20120829/DA0V31D80.html |date=August 29, 2012 |publisher=] |accessdate=August 31, 2012 }}</ref> Glycolaldehyde is needed to form ], or ], which is similar in function to ]. This finding suggests that complex organic molecules may form in stellar systems prior to the formation of planets, eventually arriving on young planets early in their formation.<ref>{{cite journal|title=Detection of the simplest sugar, glycolaldehyde, in a solar-type protostar with ALMA|author=Jørgensen, J. K.|coauthors=Favre, C.; Bisschop, S.; Bourke, T.; Dishoeck, E.; Schmalzl, M.|version=eprint |year=2012|url=http://www.eso.org/public/archives/releases/sciencepapers/eso1234/eso1234a.pdf}}</ref>


* '''Planetary ejection''' – For lithopanspermia to occur, microorganisms must first survive ejection from a planetary surface (assuming they do not form on meteorites, as suggested in<ref name=":24"/>), which involves extreme forces of acceleration and shock with associated temperature rises. Hypothetical values of shock pressures experienced by ejected rocks are obtained from Martian meteorites, which suggest pressures of approximately 5 to 55 GPa, acceleration of 3 Mm/s<sup>2</sup>] of 6 Gm/s<sup>3</sup> and post-shock temperature increases of about 1 K to 1000 K. Though these conditions are extreme, some organisms appear able to survive them.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Horneck |first1=Gerda |last2=Stöffler |first2=Dieter |last3=Ott |first3=Sieglinde |last4=Hornemann |first4=Ulrich |last5=Cockell |first5=Charles S. |last6=Moeller |first6=Ralf |last7=Meyer |first7=Cornelia |last8=de Vera |first8=Jean-Pierre |last9=Fritz |first9=Jörg |last10=Schade |first10=Sara |last11=Artemieva |first11=Natalia A. |date=February 2008 |title=Microbial rock inhabitants survive hypervelocity impacts on Mars-like host planets: first phase of lithopanspermia experimentally tested |url=https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/18237257/ |journal=Astrobiology |volume=8 |issue=1 |pages=17–44 |doi=10.1089/ast.2007.0134 |issn=1531-1074 |pmid=18237257|bibcode=2008AsBio...8...17H }}</ref>
In September 2012, ] reported that ], subjected to ] conditions, are transformed, through ], ] and ], to more complex ] - "a step along the path toward ] and ], the raw materials of ] and ], respectively".<ref name="Space-20120920">{{cite web |author=Staff |title=NASA Cooks Up Icy Organics to Mimic Life's Origins|url=http://www.space.com/17681-life-building-blocks-nasa-organic-molecules.html|date=September 20, 2012 |publisher=] |accessdate=September 22, 2012 }}</ref><ref name="AJL-20120901">{{cite journal |last1=Gudipati |first1=Murthy S. |last2=Yang |first2=Rui|title=In-Situ Probing Of Radiation-Induced Processing Of Organics In Astrophysical Ice Analogs—Novel Laser Desorption Laser Ionization Time-Of-Flight Mass Spectroscopic Studies|url=http://iopscience.iop.org/2041-8205/756/1/L24 |date=September 1, 2012 |journal=] |volume=756 |number=1 |doi=10.1088/2041-8205/756/1/L24|accessdate=September 22, 2012 }}</ref> Further, as a result of these transformations, the PAHs lose their ] which could be one of the reasons "for the lack of PAH detection in ] ], particularly the outer regions of cold, dense clouds or the upper molecular layers of ]."<ref name="Space-20120920" /><ref name="AJL-20120901" />
* '''Survival in transit''' – Now in space, the microorganisms have to make it to their next destination for lithopanspermia to be successful. The survival of microorganisms has been studied extensively using both simulated facilities and in low Earth orbit.<ref>{{Citation |last=Rothschild |first=Lynn |title=Extremophiles: defining the envelope for the search for life in the universe |date=2007-12-06 |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/cbo9780511536120.007 |work=Planetary Systems and the Origins of Life |pages=113–134 |access-date=2023-12-08 |publisher=Cambridge University Press|doi=10.1017/cbo9780511536120.007 |isbn=9780521875486 }}</ref> A large number of microorganisms have been selected for exposure experiments, both human-borne microbes (significant for future crewed missions) and ]s (significant for determining the physiological requirements of survival in space).<ref name=":5" /> Bacteria in particular can exhibit a survival mechanism whereby a colony generates a biofilm that enhances its protection against UV radiation.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Frösler |first1=Jan |last2=Panitz |first2=Corinna |last3=Wingender |first3=Jost |last4=Flemming |first4=Hans-Curt |last5=Rettberg |first5=Petra |date=May 2017 |title=Survival of''Deinococcus geothermalis''in Biofilms under Desiccation and Simulated Space and Martian Conditions |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/ast.2015.1431 |journal=Astrobiology |volume=17 |issue=5 |pages=431–447 |doi=10.1089/ast.2015.1431 |pmid=28520474 |bibcode=2017AsBio..17..431F |issn=1531-1074}}</ref>
* '''Atmospheric entry''' – The final stage of lithopanspermia, is re-entry onto a viable planet via its atmosphere. This requires that the organisms are able to further survive potential atmospheric ablation.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Cockell |first=Charles S. |date=2007-09-29 |title=The Interplanetary Exchange of Photosynthesis |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11084-007-9112-3 |journal=Origins of Life and Evolution of Biospheres |volume=38 |issue=1 |pages=87–104 |doi=10.1007/s11084-007-9112-3 |pmid=17906941 |s2cid=5720456 |issn=0169-6149}}</ref> Tests of this stage could use sounding rockets and orbital vehicles.<ref name=":5" /> '']'' spores inoculated onto ] domes were twice subjected to hypervelocity atmospheric transit by launch to a ~120&nbsp;km altitude on an Orion two-stage rocket. The spores survived on the sides of the rock, but not on the forward-facing surface that reached 145&nbsp;°C.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Fajardo-Cavazos |first1=Patricia |last2=Link |first2=Lindsey |last3=Melosh |first3=H. Jay |last4=Nicholson |first4=Wayne L. |date=December 2005 |title=''Bacillus subtilis''Spores on Artificial Meteorites Survive Hypervelocity Atmospheric Entry: Implications for Lithopanspermia |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/ast.2005.5.726 |journal=Astrobiology |volume=5 |issue=6 |pages=726–736 |doi=10.1089/ast.2005.5.726 |pmid=16379527 |bibcode=2005AsBio...5..726F |issn=1531-1074}}</ref> As photosynthetic organisms must be close to the surface of a rock to obtain sufficient light energy, atmospheric transit might act as a filter against them by ablating the surface layers of the rock. Although ] can survive the desiccating, freezing conditions of space, the STONE experiment showed that they cannot survive atmospheric entry.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Cockell |first1=Charles S. |last2=Brack |first2=André |last3=Wynn-Williams |first3=David D. |last4=Baglioni |first4=Pietro |last5=Brandstätter |first5=Franz |last6=Demets |first6=René |last7=Edwards |first7=Howell G.M. |last8=Gronstal |first8=Aaron L. |last9=Kurat |first9=Gero |last10=Lee |first10=Pascal |last11=Osinski |first11=Gordon R. |last12=Pearce |first12=David A. |last13=Pillinger |first13=Judith M. |last14=Roten |first14=Claude-Alain |last15=Sancisi-Frey |first15=Suzy |date=February 2007 |title=Interplanetary Transfer of Photosynthesis: An Experimental Demonstration of A Selective Dispersal Filter in Planetary Island Biogeography |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/ast.2006.0038 |journal=Astrobiology |volume=7 |issue=1 |pages=1–9 |doi=10.1089/ast.2006.0038 |pmid=17407400 |bibcode=2007AsBio...7....1C |issn=1531-1074}}</ref> Small non-photosynthetic organisms deep within rocks might survive the exit and entry process, including ].<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Ball |first=Philip |date=2004-09-02 |title=Alien microbes could survive crash-landing |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/news040830-10 |journal=Nature |doi=10.1038/news040830-10 |issn=0028-0836}}</ref>


Lithopanspermia, described by the mechanism above can exist as either interplanetary or interstellar. It is possible to quantify panspermia models and treat them as viable mathematical theories. For example, a recent study of planets of the ] planetary system, presents a model for estimating the probability of interplanetary panspermia, similar to studies in the past done about Earth-Mars panspermia.<ref name=":33"/> This study found that lithopanspermia is 'orders of magnitude more likely to occur'<ref name=":33" /> in the Trappist-1 system as opposed to the Earth-to-Mars scenario. According to their analysis, the increase in probability of lithopanspermia is linked to an increased probability of abiogenesis amongst the Trappist-1 planets. In a way, these modern treatments attempt to keep panspermia as a contributing factor to abiogenesis, as opposed to a theory that directly opposes it. In line with this, it is suggested that if ]s could be detected on two (or more) adjacent planets, that would provide evidence that panspermia is a potentially required mechanism for abiogenesis. As of yet, no such discovery has been made.
====Still under investigation/undetermined====
* Of the four ] performed by the Mars lander ] in 1976, only the LR (Labeled Release) experiment gave results that were initially indicative of life (metabolism). However, the similar results from heated ], how the release of indicative gas tapered off, and the lack of organic molecules in soil samples all suggest that the results were the result of a non-living chemical reaction rather than biological ]. Later experiments showed that existing oxidizers in the Martian soil could reproduce the results of the positive LR Viking experiment. Despite this, the Viking's LR experiment designer remains convinced that it is diagnostic for life on Mars.<ref name="Levin">The Carnegie Institution Geophysical Laboratory Seminar, "Analysis of evidence of Mars life" held 14 May 2007;
Summary of the lecture given by Gilbert V. Levin, Ph.D.
http://arxiv.org/abs/0705.3176, published by Electroneurobiología vol. 15 (2), pp. 39–47, 2007</ref>
] claimed to be of biogenic origin]]
* A ] originating from ] known as ] was shown in 1996 to contain ] structures resembling small terrestrial ]. When the discovery was announced, many immediately conjectured that these were ]s and were the first evidence of ] — making headlines around the world. Public interest soon started to dwindle as most experts started to agree that these structures were not indicative of life, but could instead be formed abiotically from ]. However, in November 2009, a team of scientists at ], including David McKay, reasserted that there was "strong evidence that life may have existed on ancient Mars", after having reexamined the meteorite and finding ] crystals.<ref>{{Cite web| title=New Study Adds to Finding of Ancient Life Signs in Mars Meteorite | url=http://www.nasa.gov/centers/johnson/news/releases/2009/J09-030.html | publisher=] | date=2009-11-30 | accessdate=2009-12-01}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|author=Thomas-Keprta, K., S. Clemett, D. McKay, E. Gibson and S. Wentworth|year=2009|title=Origin of Magnetite Nanocrystals in Martian Meteorite ALH84001|journal=Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta|issue=73|pages=6631–6677}}</ref>
* On May 11, 2001, two researchers from the ] claimed to have found live extraterrestrial bacteria inside a meteorite. Geologist Bruno D'Argenio and molecular biologist Giuseppe Geraci claim the bacteria were wedged inside the crystal structure of minerals, but were resurrected when a sample of the rock was placed in a culture medium. They believe that the bacteria were not terrestrial because they survived when the sample was sterilized at very high temperature and washed with alcohol. They also claim that the bacteria's DNA is unlike any on Earth.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://space.newscientist.com/article/dn725 |title=Alien visitors - 11 May 2001 - New Scientist Space |publisher=Space.newscientist.com |date= |accessdate=2009-08-20}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal|title=Microbes in rocks and meteorites: a new form of life unaffected by time, temperature, pressure |journal=Rendiconti Lincei|date=March, 2001|first=Bruno|last=D’Argenio|coauthors=Giuseppe Geraci and Rosanna del Gaudio|volume=12|issue=1|pages=51–68|doi= 10.1007/BF02904521|url=http://www.springerlink.com/content/q3215249n6853188/|format=|accessdate=2009-10-13 }}</ref> They presented a report on May 11, 2001, concluding that this is the first evidence of extraterrestrial life, documented in its genetic and morphological properties. Some of the bacteria they discovered were found inside meteorites that have been estimated to be over 4.5 billion years old, and were determined to be related to modern day ] and Bacillus pumilis bacteria on Earth but appears to be a different strain.<ref>http://www.lincei.it/pubblicazioni/rendicontiFMN/rol/pdf/S2001-01-04.pdf</ref>
* An Indian and British team of researchers led by Chandra Wickramasinghe reported on 2001 that air samples over ], gathered from the stratosphere by the ], contained clumps of living cells. Wickramasinghe calls this "unambiguous evidence for the presence of clumps of living cells in air samples from as high as 41 km, above which no air from lower down would normally be transported".<ref name="sciam_Wick">{{Cite web|url=http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?articleID=000D499B-4662-1C60-B882809EC588ED9F |title=Scientists Say They Have Found Extraterrestrial Life in the Stratosphere But Peers Are Skeptical: Scientific American |publisher=Sciam.com |date=2001-07-31 |accessdate=2009-08-20}}</ref><ref name="Narlikar 2003">{{Cite journal|author=Narlikar JV, Lloyd D, Wickramasinghe NC, et al. |title=Balloon experiment to detect micro-organisms in the outer space |journal=Astrophys Space Science |volume=285 |issue=2 |pages=555–62 |year=2003 |doi=10.1023/A:1025442021619 |url=http://www.springerlink.com/content/jp0232r03v023701/?p=3a22f0bdfe244d668927fa1d782a2b8e&pi=27|bibcode = 2003Ap&SS.285..555N }}</ref> Two bacterial and one fungal species were later independently isolated from these filters which were identified as ''Bacillus simplex'', ''Staphylococcus pasteuri'' and ''Engyodontium album'' respectively.<ref name="Wainwright, 2003">{{Cite web|url=http://meghnad.iucaa.ernet.in/~jvn/FEMS.html |title=Microorganisms cultured from stratospheric air samples obtained at 41km |author=M. Wainwright, N.C. Wickramasinghe, J.V. Narlikar, P. Rajaratnam |accessdate=2007-05-11}}{{Cite journal|author=Wainwright M |title= A microbiologist looks at panspermia |journal=Astrophys Space Science |volume=285 |issue=2 |pages=563–70 |year=2003 |doi=10.1023/A:1025494005689|bibcode = 2003Ap&SS.285..563W }}</ref> The experimental procedure suggested that these were not the result of laboratory contamination, although similar isolation experiments at separate laboratories were unsuccessful.
:A reaction report at ] indicated skepticism towards the premise that Earth life cannot travel to and reside at such altitudes.<ref>{{Cite news|author=By Richard StengerCNN.com Writer |url=http://archives.cnn.com/2000/TECH/space/11/24/alien.microbe.claim/index.html |title= Space - Scientists discover possible microbe from space |date= 2000-11-24|accessdate=2009-08-20}}</ref> Max Bernstein, a space scientist associated with ] and Ames, argues the results should be interpreted with caution, noting that "it would strain one's credulity less to believe that terrestrial organisms had somehow been transported upwards than to assume that extraterrestrial organisms are falling inward".<ref name="sciam_Wick" /> Pushkar Ganesh Vaidya from the reported in his 2009 paper that "the three microorganisms captured during the balloon experiment do not exhibit any distinct adaptations expected to be seen in microorganisms occupying a cometary niche".<ref>{{Cite journal|title=Critique on Vindication of Panspermia|journal=Apeiron|date=July 2009|first=Pushkar Ganesh Vaidya|last=|coauthors=|volume=16|issue=3|pages=|id= |url=http://redshift.vif.com/JournalFiles/V16NO3PDF/V16N3VAI.pdf|format=PDF|accessdate=2009-11-28 }}</ref><ref></ref>
* In 2005 an improved experiment was conducted by ]. On April 10, 2005 air samples were collected from six places at different altitudes from the Earth ranging from 20&nbsp;km to more than 40&nbsp;km. Adequate precautions were taken to rule out any contamination from any microorganisms already present in the collection tubes. The samples were tested at two labs in India. The labs found 12 bacterial and 6 fungal colonies in these samples. The fungal colonies were ''] decumbens'', '']'', ''] sp.'' and ''Tilletiopsis albescens''. Out of the 12 bacterial samples, three were identified as new species and named ''Janibacter hoyeli.sp.nov'' (after ]), ''Bacillus isronensis.sp.nov'' (named after ISRO) and ''Bacillus aryabhati'' (named after the ancient Indian mathematician, ]). These three new species showed that they were more resistant to ] than similar bacteria found on Earth. For any organism living so far up the Earth's atmosphere or having come from outside Earth, the UV radiation resistance would be extremely critical for survival.<ref>''Janibacter hoylei sp. nov.'', ''Bacillus isronensis sp. nov.'' and ''Bacillus aryabhattai sp. nov.'', isolated from cryotubes used for collecting air from upper atmosphere. ''International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology'' 2009. http://ijs.sgmjournals.org/cgi/content/abstract/ijs.0.002527-0v1</ref><ref></ref>
{{anchor|NIH-2006}}
]
{{anchor|Complexity}}
* Recent studies, applying the equivalent of ] to biological evolution and extrapolating backwards, propose that ] began "{{val|9.7|2.5}} billion years ago", billions of years before the ] was formed.<ref name="arXiv-20130328">{{cite journal |last1=Sharov |first1=Alexei A. |last2=Gordon |first2=Richard |title=Life Before Earth |url=http://arxiv.org/ftp/arxiv/papers/1304/1304.3381.pdf |date=28 March 2013 |journal=] |arxiv=1304.3381v1 |accessdate=16 April 2013 }}</ref><ref name="NIH-20060612">{{cite journal |last=Sharov |first=Alexei A. |title=Genome increase as a clock for the origin and evolution of life |journal=] |volume=1 |pages=1–17 |date=12 June 2006 |issue= |doi=10.1186/1745-6150-1-17 |pmc=1526419 }}</ref> In the case of ], empirical evidence suggested a doubling of complexity every 376 million years. As the age of trees can be measured by the number of rings, the ] that the age of life could be measured by biological ] (i.e., the length of functional non-redundant ] in the ]) was studied.<ref name="arXiv-20130328" /><ref name="NIH-20060612" /> If log-transformed complexity is plotted against the time of origin of large evolutionary lineages, then the points fit to a straight line (see figure). The exponential increase in complexity can be explained by a positive self-activating ].<ref name="NIH-20060612" /> The regression line hits zero (i.e., one ]) at "{{val|9.7|2.5}} billion years ago".<ref name="arXiv-20130328" /> If this model is correct, and since our ] is 4.6 billion years ago,<ref name="NG-2010">The date is based on the oldest ]s found to date in ]s, and is thought to be the date of the formation of the first solid material in the collapsing ].<br>{{cite journal |last1=Bouvier |first1=A. |last2=Wadhwa |first2=M. |title=The age of the solar system redefined by the oldest Pb-Pb age of a meteoritic inclusion. |url=http://www.nature.com/ngeo/journal/v3/n9/abs/ngeo941.html |journal=] |volume=3 |pages=637-641 |date=22 August 2010 |doi=10.1038/NGEO941 |accessdate=17 April 2013 }}</ref> then life somehow arrived to Earth from older stellar systems. This hypothesis was criticized by ] who suggested that the rates of early biological evolution might have been much faster due to the absence of competition on early Earth.<ref name="Koonin-2002">{{cite book |author=Koonin, E. V. |coauthors=Galperin, M. Y. |title=Sequence - Evolution - Function: Computational Approaches in Comparative Genomics |url=http://www.springer.com/life+sciences/animal+sciences/book/978-1-4020-7274-1 |publisher=] |year=2002 }}</ref> ] argued that "it is inconceivable that life began with just a few nucleotides" (see discussion<ref name="NIH-20060612" />). To answer this criticism, Sharov proposed a hypothetical ] scenario that starts from ] that are functionally equivalent to single ].<ref name="Sharov-2009">{{cite journal |author=Sharov, A.A. |title=Coenzyme autocatalytic network on the surface of oil microspheres as a model for the origin of life |url=http://www.mdpi.com/1422-0067/10/4/1838 |journal=] |volume=10 |issue= |pages =1838–1852 |date=22 April 2009 }}</ref><ref name="Coenzyme-2011">{{cite book |last=Raffaelli |first=Nadia |title=Origins of Life: The Primal Self-Organization - Nicotinamide Coenzyme Synthesis: A Case of Ribonucleotide Emergence or a Byproduct of the RNA World? |url=http://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007/978-3-642-21625-1_9 |date=2011 |pages=185-208 |publisher=] |isbn=978-3-642-21624-4 |doi=10.1007/978-3-642-21625-1_9 |accessdate=17 April 2013 }}</ref> (see ])


Lithopanspermia has also been hypothesized to operate between stellar systems. One mathematical analysis, estimating the total number of rocky or icy objects that could potentially be captured by planetary systems within the ], has concluded that lithopanspermia is not necessarily bound to a single stellar system.<ref name=":62" /> This not only requires these objects have life in the first place, but also that it survives the journey. Thus intragalactic lithopanspermia is heavily dependent on the survival lifetime of organisms, as well as the velocity of the transporter. Again, there is no evidence that such a process has, or can occur.
====Disputed====
A NASA research group found a small number of '']'' bacteria living inside the camera of the ] spacecraft when it was brought back to Earth by ]. They believed that the bacteria survived since the time of the craft's launch to the Moon.<ref>{{Cite web| url=http://www.lpi.usra.edu/lunar/missions/apollo/apollo_12/experiments/surveyor/| title=Apollo 12 Mission|publisher=Lunar and Planetary Institute|accessdate=2008-02-15}}</ref> However, these reports are disputed by Leonard D. Jaffe, who was Surveyor program scientist and custodian of the Surveyor 3 parts brought back from the Moon, stated in a letter to the Planetary Society that an unnamed member of his staff reported that a "breach of sterile procedure" took place at just the right time to produce a false positive result.<ref>{{Cite web| url=http://www.astrobio.net/exclusive/1311/apollo-12-remembered| title=Apollo 12 Remembered|publisher=Astrobiology Magazine (online 21 Nov 2004)|accessdate=2011-02-05}}</ref> NASA was funding an archival study in 2007 that was trying to locate the film of the camera-body microbial sampling to confirm the report of a breach in sterile technique. NASA currently stands by its original assessment: see ].{{Citation needed|date=January 2011}}


==== Counterarguments====
On January 10, 2013, ] reported in the ] ], of shapes resembling fossil ] ]s in a new carbonaceous meteorite called ] that landed in the North Central Province of Sri Lanka on 29 December 2012.<ref name="JCosmology-20130110">{{Cite journal |first=N.C. |last=Wickramasinghe |coauthors=Wallis, J.; Wallis, D. H.; Samaranayake, Anil |authorlink=Chandra Wickramasinghe |title=Fossil Diatoms in a New Carbonaceous Meteorite |date=January 10, 2013 |url=http://www.buckingham.ac.uk/wp-content/uploads/2011/09/Polonnaruwa-meteorite.pdf |publisher=] |volume=21 |number=37 |pages=1–14 |accessdate=January 14, 2013 }}</ref> Early on, there was criticism that that Wickramasinghe's article was not an examination of the Polonnaruwa meteorite but of some terrestrial rock passed off as the meteorite.<ref name='Slate'>{{cite news | first = ] | title = No, Diatoms Have Not Been Found in a Meteorite | date = 15 January 2013 | url = http://www.slate.com/blogs/bad_astronomy/2013/01/15/life_in_a_meteorite_claims_by_n_c_wickramasinghe_of_diatoms_in_a_meteorite.html | work = Slate.com - Astronomy | accessdate = 2013-01-16}}</ref>
The complex nature of the requirements for lithopanspermia, as well as evidence against the longevity of bacteria being able to survive under these conditions,<ref name=":112"/> makes lithopanspermia a difficult theory to get behind. That being said, impact events did happen a lot in the early stages of the solar system formation, and still happen to a certain degree today within the asteroid belt.<ref>{{Citation |last=Ivanov |first=Boris |title=Size-Frequency Distribution Of Asteroids And Impact Craters: Estimates Of Impact Rate |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-6452-4_2 |work=Catastrophic Events Caused by Cosmic Objects |date=2007 |pages=91–116 |access-date=2023-12-08 |place=Dordrecht |publisher=Springer Netherlands |doi=10.1007/978-1-4020-6452-4_2 |isbn=978-1-4020-6451-7}}</ref>


=== Directed panspermia ===
Wickramasinghe's team remark that they are aware that a large number of unrelated stones have been submitted for analysis, and have no knowledge regarding the nature, source or origin of the stones their critics have examined, so Wickramasinghe clarifies that he is using the stones submitted by the Medical Research Institute in Sri Lanka.<ref name='isotopes'> {{cite journal | title = The Polonnaruwa meteorite: oxygen isotope, crystalline and biological composition | journal = ] | date = 5 March 2013 | first = Jamie Wallis | coauthors = Nori Miyake, Richard B. Hoover, Andrew Oldroyd, Daryl H. Wallis, Anyl Samaranayake, K. Wickramarathne, M.K. Wallis, Karl H. Gibson and N.C. Wickramasinghe | volume = 22 | issue = 2 | url = http://journalofcosmology.com/JOC22/Paper22%282%29.pdf | accessdate = 2013-03-07}}</ref>
{{Main|Directed panspermia}}


First proposed in 1972 by Nobel prize winner ], along with ], directed panspermia is the theory that life was deliberately brought to Earth by a higher intelligent being from another planet.<ref name=":7">{{Cite journal |last1=Crick |first1=F. H. C. |last2=Orgel |first2=L. E. |date=1973-07-01 |title=Directed panspermia |url=https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0019-1035%2873%2990110-3 |journal=Icarus |volume=19 |issue=3 |pages=341–346 |doi=10.1016/0019-1035(73)90110-3 |bibcode=1973Icar...19..341C |issn=0019-1035}}</ref> In light of the evidence at the time that it seems unlikely for an organism to have been delivered to Earth via radiopanspermia or lithopanspermia, Crick and Orgel proposed this as an alternative theory, though it is worth noting that Orgel was less serious about the claim.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Plaxco |first=Kevin |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.56021/9781421441306 |title=Astrobiology |date=2021 |publisher=Johns Hopkins University Press |doi=10.56021/9781421441306 |isbn=978-1-4214-4130-6}}</ref> They do acknowledge that the scientific evidence is lacking, but discuss what kinds of evidence would be needed to support the theory. In a similar vein, ] suggested that life on Earth might have originated accidentally from a pile of 'Cosmic Garbage' dumped on Earth long ago by extraterrestrial beings.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Gold |first=Thomas |chapter=Reasons for expecting subsurface life on many planetary bodies |editor-first1=Richard B. |editor-last1=Hoover |date=1997-07-11 |title=Instruments, Methods, and Missions for the Investigation of Extraterrestrial Microorganisms |chapter-url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.278775 |series=SPIE Proceedings |volume=3111 |pages=7–14 |publisher=] |doi=10.1117/12.278775|s2cid=97077011 }}</ref> These theories are often considered more science fiction, however, Crick and Orgel use the principle of cosmic reversibility to argue for it.
In response to the criticism from other scientists, Wickramasinghe performed ] <ref name='authenticity'> {{cite journal | title = Authenticity of the life-bearing Polonnaruwa meteorite | journal = ] | date = 4 February 2013 | first = N.C. | last = N.C. Wickramasinghe | coauthors = J. Wallis, N. Miyake, Anthony Oldroyd, D.H. Wallis, Anil Samaranayake, K. Wickramarathne , Richard B. Hoover and M.K. Wallis | url = http://journalofcosmology.com/JOC21/Polonnaruwa5R.pdf | accessdate = 2013-02-04}}</ref> and ]<ref name='isotopes'/> analyses to verify its meteoric origin. His analysis revealed a 95% ] and 3% ] content,<ref name='authenticity'/> and interpreted this result as a "] of unknown type".<ref name='authenticity'/> In addition, Wickramasinghe's team remarked that the temperature at which sand must be heated by lightning to melt and form a fulgurite (1770 °C) would have vaporized and burned all carbon-rich organisms and melted and thus destroyed the delicately marked silica frustules of the diatoms,<ref name='isotopes'/> and that the oxygen isotope data confirms its meteoric origin.<ref name='isotopes'/> Wickramasinghe's team also argues that since living diatoms require ] to synthetize amino acids, proteins, DNA, RNA and other life-critical biomolecules, a population of extraterrestrial ] must have been a required component of the comet (Polonnaruwa meteorite) "ecosystem".<ref name='isotopes'/>


This principle is based on the fact that if our species is capable of infecting a sterile planet, then what is preventing another technological society from having done that to Earth in the past?<ref name=":7" /> They concluded that it would be possible to deliberately infect another planet in the foreseeable future. As far as evidence goes, Crick and Orgel argued that given the universality of the genetic code, it follows that an infective theory for life is viable.<ref name=":7" />
====Hoaxes====
A separate fragment of the ] meteorite (kept in a sealed glass jar since its discovery) was found in 1965 to have a seed capsule embedded in it, whilst the original glassy layer on the outside remained undisturbed. Despite great initial excitement, the seed was found to be that of a European ] or Rush plant that had been glued into the fragment and camouflaged using ]. The outer "fusion layer" was in fact glue. Whilst the perpetrator of this hoax is unknown, it is thought he sought to influence the 19th century debate on ] — rather than panspermia — by demonstrating the transformation of inorganic to biological matter.<ref>Edward Anders, Eugene R. DuFresne,Ryoichi Hayatsu, Albert Cavaille, Ann DuFresne, and Frank W. Fitch. "Contaminated Meteorite," Science, New Series, Volume 146, Issue 3648 (Nov.27, 1964), 1157-1161.</ref>


Directed panspermia could, in theory, be demonstrated by finding a distinctive 'signature' message had been deliberately implanted into either the ] or the ] of the first microorganisms by our hypothetical progenitor, some 4 billion years ago.<ref>{{Citation |last=Marx |first=George |title=Message through time |date=1979 |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/b978-0-08-024727-4.50021-4 |work=Communication with Extraterrestrial Intelligence |pages=221–225 |access-date=2023-12-08 |publisher=Elsevier|doi=10.1016/b978-0-08-024727-4.50021-4 |isbn=9780080247274 }}</ref> However, there is no known mechanism that could prevent ] and ] from removing such a message over long periods of time.<ref name=":122">{{Cite journal |last1=Yokoo |first1=Hiromitsu |last2=Oshima |first2=Tairo |date=April 1979 |title=Is bacteriophage φX174 DNA a message from an extraterrestrial intelligence? |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0019-1035(79)90094-0 |journal=Icarus |volume=38 |issue=1 |pages=148–153 |bibcode=1979Icar...38..148Y |doi=10.1016/0019-1035(79)90094-0 |issn=0019-1035}}</ref>
==Objections to panspermia and exogenesis==
* Life as we know it requires the elements ], ], ], ], ], ] and ] (H, C, N, O, Fe, P, and S respectively) to exist at sufficient densities and temperatures for the chemical reactions between them to occur. These conditions are not widespread in the Universe, so this limits the distribution of life as an ongoing process. First, the elements C, N and O are only created after at least one cycle of star birth/death: this is a limit to the earliest time life could have arisen.{{Citation needed|date=January 2013}} Second, densities of elements sufficient for the formation of more complex molecules necessary to life (such as amino acids) only occur in molecular dust clouds (10<sup>9</sup>–10<sup>12</sup> particles/m<sup>3</sup>), and (following their collapse) in solar systems.{{Citation needed|date=January 2013}} Third, temperatures must be lower than those in stars (elements are stripped of electrons: a ] state) but higher than in the ] (reaction rates are too low).{{Citation needed|date=January 2013}} This restricts ongoing life to planetary environments where heavy elements are present at high densities, so long as temperatures are sufficient for plausible reaction rates. Note this does not restrict dormant forms of life to these environments, so this argument only contradicts the widest interpretation of panspermia — that life is ongoing and is spread across many different environments throughout the Universe — and presupposes that any life needs those elements, which the proponents of ] do not consider certain.


==== Counterarguments ====
* Space is a damaging environment for life, as it would be exposed to ], ]s and ]s. Environments may exist within meteors or ]s that are somewhat shielded from these hazards. However, the extreme resistance of '']'' to radiation, cold, dehydration and vacuum shows{{Citation needed|date=January 2013}} that at least one known organism is capable of surviving the hazards of space without need for special protection.
In 1972, both abiogenesis and panspermia were seen as viable theories by different experts.<ref name=":44"/> Given this, Crick and Orgel argued that experimental evidence required to validate one theory over the other was lacking.<ref name=":7" /> That being said, evidence strongly in favor of abiogenesis over panspermia exists today{{Citation needed|date=October 2024}}, whereas evidence for panspermia, particularly directed panspermia, is decidedly lacking.


=== Origination and distribution of organic molecules: Pseudo-panspermia ===
* Bacteria would not survive the immense heat and forces of an impact on Earth, also of the impact that launched them into space from their original habitat. However, most of the heat generated when a ] enters the Earth's atmosphere is carried away by ] and the interiors of freshly landed ] are rarely heated much and are often cold.{{Citation needed|date=January 2013}} The shock that sends them into space is the toughest challenge. Recent studies show that they could also survive if the impactor is larger or the planet has less gravity or less atmosphere.<ref>, Space Daily, June 12, 2001</ref><ref>{{Cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/2992123.stm |title=Science/Nature&#124; Worms survived Columbia disaster |publisher=BBC News |date=2003-05-01 |accessdate=2009-08-20}}</ref><ref>''Earth and Planetary Science Letters 189 (2001) 1-8''</ref> The existence of ]s and ]s on Earth suggests material transfer from other celestial bodies to Earth happens regularly.
{{main|Pseudo-panspermia}}


] is the well-supported hypothesis that many of the small ]s used for ] originated in space, and were distributed to ]ary surfaces. Life then emerged on ], and ], by the processes of ].<ref name="Klyce 2001">{{cite web |last=Klyce |first=Brig |date=2001 |title=Panspermia Asks New Questions |url=http://www.panspermia.org/oseti.htm |access-date=25 July 2013}}</ref><ref name="SETI 2001">{{cite book |last1=Klyce |first1=Brig I |title=The Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence (SETI) in the Optical Spectrum III |chapter=Panspermia asks new questions |date=2001 |editor1-last=Kingsley |editor1-first=Stuart A |volume=4273 |pages=11–14 |bibcode=2001SPIE.4273...11K |doi=10.1117/12.435366 |editor2-last=Bhathal |editor2-first=Ragbir |s2cid=122849901}}</ref> Evidence for pseudo-panspermia includes the discovery of organic compounds such as sugars, ]s, and ]s in meteorites and other extraterrestrial bodies,<ref name="NASA-20191118">{{cite news |last1=Steigerwald |first1=Bill |last2=Jones |first2=Nancy |last3=Furukawa |first3=Yoshihiro |title=First Detection of Sugars in Meteorites Gives Clues to Origin of Life |url=https://www.nasa.gov/press-release/goddard/2019/sugars-in-meteorites |date=18 November 2019 |work=] |access-date=18 November 2019 }}</ref><ref name="PNAS-20191118">{{cite journal |last=Furukawa |first=Yoshihiro |display-authors=et al. |title=Extraterrestrial ribose and other sugars in primitive meteorites |date=18 November 2019 |journal=] |volume=116 |issue=49 |pages=24440–24445 |doi=10.1073/pnas.1907169116 |pmid=31740594 |pmc=6900709 |bibcode=2019PNAS..11624440F |doi-access=free }}</ref><ref name="Furukawa Chikaraishi Ohkouchi 2019">{{Cite journal |last1=Furukawa |first1=Yoshihiro |last2=Chikaraishi |first2=Yoshito |last3=Ohkouchi |first3=Naohiko |last4=Ogawa |first4=Nanako O. |last5=Glavin |first5=Daniel P. |last6=Dworkin |first6=Jason P. |last7=Abe |first7=Chiaki |last8=Nakamura |first8=Tomoki |display-authors=3 |date=13 November 2019 |title=Extraterrestrial ribose and other sugars in primitive meteorites |journal=Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences |volume=116 |issue=49 |pages=24440–24445 |doi=10.1073/pnas.1907169116 |pmid=31740594 |bibcode=2019PNAS..11624440F |doi-access=free |pmc=6900709}}</ref><ref name="Martins Botta Fogel 2008">{{cite journal |doi=10.1016/j.epsl.2008.03.026 |title=Extraterrestrial nucleobases in the Murchison meteorite |date=2008 |last1=Martins |first1=Zita |last2=Botta |first2=Oliver |last3=Fogel |first3=Marilyn L. |author-link3=Marilyn Fogel |last4=Sephton |first4=Mark A. |last5=Glavin |first5=Daniel P. |last6=Watson |first6=Jonathan S. |last7=Dworkin |first7=Jason P. |last8=Schwartz |first8=Alan W. |last9=Ehrenfreund |first9=Pascale |display-authors=3 |journal=Earth and Planetary Science Letters |volume=270 |issue=1–2 |pages=130–136 |bibcode=2008E&PSL.270..130M |arxiv=0806.2286 |s2cid=14309508 }}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Rivilla |first1=Víctor M. |last2=Jiménez-Serra |first2=Izaskun |last3=Martín-Pintado |first3=Jesús |last4=Colzi |first4=Laura |last5=Tercero |first5=Belén |last6=de Vicente |first6=Pablo |last7=Zeng |first7=Shaoshan |last8=Martín |first8=Sergio |last9=García de la Concepción |first9=Juan |last10=Bizzocchi |first10=Luca |last11=Melosso |first11=Mattia |date=2022 |title=Molecular Precursors of the RNA-World in Space: New Nitriles in the G+0.693−0.027 Molecular Cloud |journal=Frontiers in Astronomy and Space Sciences |volume=9 |page=876870 |doi=10.3389/fspas.2022.876870 |arxiv=2206.01053 |bibcode=2022FrASS...9.6870R |issn=2296-987X|doi-access=free }}</ref> and the formation of similar compounds in the laboratory under outer space conditions.<ref name="NASA-20150303">{{cite web |last=Marlaire |first=Ruth |title=NASA Ames Reproduces the Building Blocks of Life in Laboratory |url=http://www.nasa.gov/content/nasa-ames-reproduces-the-building-blocks-of-life-in-laboratory |date=3 March 2015 |work=] |access-date=5 March 2015 |archive-date=5 March 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150305083306/http://www.nasa.gov/content/nasa-ames-reproduces-the-building-blocks-of-life-in-laboratory/ |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref name="Krasnokutski Chuang Jäger 2022">{{cite journal |doi=10.1038/s41550-021-01577-9 |title=A pathway to peptides in space through the condensation of atomic carbon |date=2022 |last1=Krasnokutski |first1=S.A. |last2=Chuang |first2=K. J. |last3=Jäger |first3=C. |last4=Ueberschaar |first4=N. |last5=Henning |first5=Th. |display-authors=3 |journal=Nature Astronomy |volume=6 |issue=3 |pages=381–386 |arxiv=2202.12170 |bibcode=2022NatAs...6..381K |s2cid=246768607 }}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Sithamparam |first1=Mahendran |last2=Satthiyasilan |first2=Nirmell |last3=Chen |first3=Chen |last4=Jia |first4=Tony Z. |last5=Chandru |first5=Kuhan |date=2022-02-11 |title=A material-based panspermia hypothesis: The potential of polymer gels and membraneless droplets |url=https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/bip.23486 |journal=Biopolymers |volume=113 |issue=5 |pages=e23486 |doi=10.1002/bip.23486 |pmid=35148427 |arxiv=2201.06732 |s2cid=246016331}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Comte |first1=Denis |last2=Lavy |first2=Léo |last3=Bertier |first3=Paul |last4=Calvo |first4=Florent |last5=Daniel |first5=Isabelle |last6=Farizon |first6=Bernadette |last7=Farizon |first7=Michel |last8=Märk |first8=Tilmann D. |date=2023-01-26 |title=Glycine Peptide Chain Formation in the Gas Phase via Unimolecular Reactions |url=https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acs.jpca.2c08248 |journal=The Journal of Physical Chemistry A |language=en |volume=127 |issue=3 |pages=775–780 |doi=10.1021/acs.jpca.2c08248 |pmid=36630603 |bibcode=2023JPCA..127..775C |s2cid=255748895 |issn=1089-5639}}</ref> A prebiotic polyester system has been explored as an example.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Chandru |last2=Mamajanov |last3=Cleaves |last4=Jia |date=2020-01-19 |title=Polyesters as a Model System for Building Primitive Biologies from Non-Biological Prebiotic Chemistry |journal=Life |volume=10 |issue=1 |pages=6 |doi=10.3390/life10010006 |pmid=31963928 |pmc=7175156 |bibcode=2020Life...10....6C |doi-access=free }}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Jia |first1=Tony Z. |last2=Chandru |first2=Kuhan |last3=Hongo |first3=Yayoi |last4=Afrin |first4=Rehana |last5=Usui |first5=Tomohiro |last6=Myojo |first6=Kunihiro |last7=Cleaves |first7=H. James |date=2019-08-06 |title=Membraneless polyester microdroplets as primordial compartments at the origins of life |journal=Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences |volume=116 |issue=32 |pages=15830–15835 |doi=10.1073/pnas.1902336116 |pmc=6690027 |pmid=31332006 |bibcode=2019PNAS..11615830J |doi-access=free }}</ref>
* Supporters of exogenesis also argue that on a larger scale, for life to emerge in one place in the Universe and subsequently spread to other planets would be simpler than similar life emerging separately on different planets.{{Citation needed|date=January 2013}} However, this assumes that the emergence of life in the entire Universe is rare enough as to limit it to one or few events or origination sites. Exogenesis still requires life to have originated from somewhere, most probably some form of ]. Given the immense expanse of the entire Universe, it has been argued that {{Who|date=June 2009}}there is a higher probability that there exists (or has existed) another Earth-like planet that has yielded life than not.{{Citation needed|date=January 2013}} This explanation is more preferred under ] than exogenesis since it theorizes that the creation of life is a matter of probability and can occur when the correct conditions are met rather than in exogenesis that assumes it is a singular event or that Earth did not meet those conditions on its own. In other words, exogenesis theorizes only one or few origins of life in the Universe, whereas abiogenesis theorizes that it is a matter of probability depending on the conditions of the celestial body. However, since to date no extraterrestrial life has been confirmed, both hypotheses still suffer from lack of information and many unidentified variables.
<!-- Please do not add material here, this is just a summary of the ] article. -->


== Hoaxes & speculations ==
* Even if life were to survive - or develop in space — these would be very enduring life forms, as the hypothesis proposes, and they would have already visibly populated and altered Venus and Mars as well as other moons in the solar system.{{Citation needed|date=January 2013}}


=== Orgueil meteorite ===
==Accidental panspermia==
On May 14, 1864, twenty fragments from a meteorite crashed into the French city of Orgueil. A separate fragment of the ] (kept in a sealed glass jar since its discovery) was found in 1965 to have a seed capsule embedded in it, while the original glassy layer on the outside remained undisturbed. Despite great initial excitement, the seed was found to be that of a European ] or rush plant that had been glued into the fragment and camouflaged using ].<ref name=":14"/> The outer "fusion layer" was in fact glue. While the perpetrator of this hoax is unknown, it is thought that they sought to influence the 19th-century debate on ]—rather than panspermia—by demonstrating the transformation of inorganic to biological matter.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Anders |first1=Edward |last2=DuFresne |first2=Eugene R. |last3=Hayatsu |first3=Ryoichi |last4=Cavaillé |first4=Albert |last5=DuFresne |first5=Ann |last6=Fitch |first6=Frank W. |date=1964-11-27 |title=Contaminated Meteorite |url=https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.146.3648.1157 |journal=Science |language=en |volume=146 |issue=3648 |pages=1157–1161 |doi=10.1126/science.146.3648.1157 |pmid=17832241 |bibcode=1964Sci...146.1157A |s2cid=38428960 |issn=0036-8075}}</ref>
] a professor of ] suggested a "garbage theory" for the origin of life, the theory says that life on Earth might have spread from a pile of ] products accidentally dumped on Earth long ago by ].<ref>Gold, T. "Cosmic Garbage," Air Force and Space Digest, 65 (May 1960).</ref>


==Directed panspermia== === Oumuamua ===
{{Main|Directed panspermia}} {{Main|ʻOumuamua|l1=Oumuamua}}
Directed panspermia concerns the deliberate transport of microorganisms in space, sent to Earth to start life here, or sent from Earth to seed new solar systems with life.
The Nobel prize winner ], along with ] proposed seeds of life may have been purposely spread by an advanced extraterrestrial civilization,<ref name="Crick_Orgel"/> but considering an early "]" Crick noted later that life may have originated on Earth.<ref>"" by L. E. Orgel and F. H. C. Crick in ''FASEB J.'' (1993) Volume 7 pages 238-239.</ref>


In 2017, the Pan-STARRS telescope in Hawaii detected a reddish object up to 400 meters in length. Analysis of its orbit provided evidence that it was an interstellar object, originating from outside our Solar System.<ref>{{Cite web |title='Oumuamua - NASA Science |url=https://science.nasa.gov/solar-system/comets/oumuamua/ |access-date=2023-11-28 |website=science.nasa.gov |language=en}}</ref> From this ] speculated that the object was instead an artifact from an alien civilization and could potentially be evidence for directed panspermia.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Billings |first=Lee |date=2021-04-01 |title=Astronomer Avi Loeb Says Aliens Have Visited, and He's Not Kidding |url=https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/astronomer-avi-loeb-says-aliens-have-visited-and-hes-not-kidding1/ |access-date=2023-11-28 |website=Scientific American |language=en}}</ref> This claim has been considered unlikely by other authors.<ref name="LS-20200819">{{cite news |last=Letzer |first=Ran |date=19 August 2020 |title=Interstellar visitor 'Oumuamua could still be alien technology, new study hints – Aliens? Or a chunk of solid hydrogen? Which idea makes less sense? |work=] |url=https://www.livescience.com/oumuamua-interstellar-hydrogen-or-aliens.html |url-status=live |access-date=6 January 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210109012743/https://www.livescience.com/oumuamua-interstellar-hydrogen-or-aliens.html |archive-date=9 January 2021}}</ref>
Conversely, active directed panspermia has been proposed to secure and expand life in space.<ref name="autogenerated1" /> This may be motivated by biotic ethics that values, and seeks to propagate, the basic patterns of our organic gene/protein life-form.<ref>{{Cite journal | last = Mautner | first = Michael N. | title = Life-centered ethics, and the human future in space | journal = Bioethics | volume = 23 | pages = 433–440 | year = 2009 | doi = 10.1111/j.1467-8519.2008.00688.x | pmid=19077128 | url = http://www.astro-ecology.com/PDFLifeCenteredBioethics2009Paper.pdf }}</ref> The panbiotic program would seed new solar systems nearby, and clusters of new stars in interstellar clouds. These young targets, where local life would not have formed yet, avoid any interference with local life.


== See also ==
For example, microbial payloads launched by solar sails at speeds up to 0.0001 ''c'' (30,000&nbsp;m/s) would reach targets at 10 to 100 light-years in 0.1 million to 1 million years. Fleets of microbial capsules can be aimed at clusters of new stars in star-forming clouds, where they may land on planets or captured by asteroids and comets and later delivered to planets. Payloads may contain ]s for diverse environments and ] similar to early microorganisms. Hardy multicellular organisms (rotifer cysts) may be included to induce higher evolution.<ref>{{Cite book| last = Mautner | first = Michael Noah Ph.D.| author-link = Michael Noah Mautner | title = Seeding the Universe with Life: Securing our Cosmological Future | publisher = Legacy Books (www.amazon.com) | year = 2000 | isbn = 0-476-00330-X | url = http://www.astro-ecology.com/PDFSeedingtheUniverse2005Book.pdf }}</ref>
* {{annotated link |Abiogenesis}}
* {{annotated link |Astrobiology}}
* {{annotated link |Cryptobiosis}}
* {{annotated link |List of microorganisms tested in outer space}}
* {{annotated link |Planetary protection}}


== References ==
The probability of hitting the target zone can be calculated from <math>P(target) = \frac{A(target)}{\pi (dy)^2} = \frac{a r(target)^2 v^2}{(tp)^2 d^4}</math> where ''A''(target) is the cross-section of the target area, ''dy'' is the positional uncertainty at arrival; ''a'' - constant (depending on units), ''r''(target) is the radius of the target area; ''v'' the velocity of the probe; (tp) the targeting precision (arcsec/yr); and ''d'' the distance to the target, guided by high-resolution astrometry of 1×10<sup>−5</sup> arcsec/yr (all units in SIU). These calculations show that relatively near target stars(Alpha PsA, Beta Pictoris) can be seeded by milligrams of launched microbes; while seeding the Rho Ophiochus star-forming cloud requires hundreds of kilograms of dispersed capsules.<ref name="autogenerated1" />
{{reflist}}


== Further reading ==
Theoretically, unintended panspermia may occur by spacecraft travelling to other celestial bodies. This may concern space researchers who try to prevent ]. However, directed panspermia may reach a few dozen target systems, leaving billions in the galaxy untouched for exploration. In any case, matter is exchanged ] in the solar system even without human intervention.
{{Library resources box}}


* {{citation |last=Crick |first=Francis |author-link=Francis Crick |title=Life, Its Origin and Nature |publisher=Simon & Schuster |year=1981 |isbn=978-0708822357 |ref=none}}
] to secure and expand life in space is becoming possible due to developments in ], precise ], ], ] and microbial ]. After determining the composition of chosen meteorites, ] performed laboratory experiments that suggest that many colonizing microorganisms and some plants could obtain many of their chemical nutrients from asteroid and cometary materials.<ref name=bioresources>{{Cite journal | last = Mautner | first = Michael N. | title = Planetary bioresources and astroecology. 1. Planetary microcosm bioessays of Martian and meteorite materials: soluble electrolytes, nutrients, and algal and plant responses|journal = Icarus |volume = 158 | pages = 72–86 | year = 2002 | doi=10.1006/icar.2002.6841 | bibcode=2002Icar..158...72M | url = http://www.astro-ecology.com/PDFBioresourcesIcarus2002Paper.pdf }}</ref> However, the scientists noted that phosphate (PO<sub>4</sub>) and ] (NO<sub>3</sub>–N) critically limit nutrition to many terrestrial lifeforms.<ref name=bioresources/> With such materials, and energy from long-lived stars, microscopic life planted by ] could find an immense future in the galaxy.<ref>{{Cite journal|last = Mautner |first = Michael N. | title = Life in the cosmological future: Resources, biomass and populations | journal = Journal of the British Interplanetary Society | year = 2005 | volume = 58 | pages = 167–180 | url=http://www.astro-ecology.com/PDFCosmologyJBIS2005Paper.pdf }}</ref>
* {{citation |last=Hoyle |first=Fred |author-link=Fred Hoyle |title=The Intelligent Universe |publisher=Michael Joseph |place=London |year=1983 |isbn=978-0718122980 |ref=none}}


== External links ==
==Missions==
===Foton-M3 spacecraft===
In September 2007, after enduring a 12-day orbital mission and a fiery reentry, the European unmanned spacecraft ] was retrieved from a field in Kazakhstan.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.esa.int/esaCP/SEMFVO6H07F_index_0.html |title=Foton-M3 experiments return to Earth |accessdate= 2007-09-26 |work= }}</ref> The 5,500-pound capsule, seven feet in diameter, carried a payload of 43 European experiments in a range of scientific disciplines – including fluid physics, biology, crystal growth, radiation exposure and ].<ref> Sep 12, 2007.</ref> The capsule contained, among other things, ] that were exposed to the radiation of space. Scientists also strapped basalt and granite disks riddled with cyanobacteria to the capsule's heat shield to see if the microorganisms could survive the brutal conditions of reentry. Some bacteria, lichens, spores, and even one animal (]) were found to have survived the outer space environment and ].<ref name=Foton ></ref><ref name=Foton-M3>{{Cite web|url=http://www.congrex.nl/08a09/Sessions/26-06%20Session%202a.htm |title=LIFE IN SPACE FOR LIFE ON EARTH - Biosatelite Foton M3 |accessdate=2009-10-13 |date=June 26, 2008 }}</ref><ref name=Tardigrades >{{Cite journal|title=Tardigrades survive exposure to space in low Earth orbit |journal=Current Biology|date=9 September 2008|first=K. Ingemar Jönsson|last=|coauthors=Elke Rabbow, Ralph O. Schill, Mats Harms-Ringdahl and Petra Rettberg|volume=18|issue=17|pages=R729–R731|doi= 10.1016/j.cub.2008.06.048|url=http://www.sciencedirect.com/science?_ob=ArticleURL&_udi=B6VRT-4TD6241-8&_user=10&_rdoc=1&_fmt=&_orig=search&_sort=d&_docanchor=&view=c&_searchStrId=1046838032&_rerunOrigin=scholar.google&_acct=C000050221&_version=1&_urlVersion=0&_userid=10&md5=761b97d947706378039a09e4ae887166|format=|accessdate=2009-10-13|pmid=18786368|last1=Jönsson }}</ref>


* Cox, Brian. . BBC Ideas, video made by Pomona Pictures, 29 November 2021.
===Living Interplanetary Flight Experiment===
* Loeb, Abraham. . '']'', 4 November 2019
The ], which was developed by the ], intended to send selected microorganisms on a three-year interplanetary round-trip in a small capsule aboard the Russian ] ] in 2011. The goal was to test whether organisms can survive a few years in deep space. Unfortunately, the spacecraft suffered technical difficulties soon after launch and fell back to Earth so the experiment was never carried out. The experiment would have tested one aspect of transpermia, the hypothesis that life could survive space travel, if protected inside rocks blasted by impact off one planet to land on another.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.planetary.org/programs/projects/life/ |title=LIFE Experiment |publisher=Planetary.org |date= |accessdate=2009-08-20}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.lpi.usra.edu/meetings/phobosdeimos2007/pdf/7043.pdf |title=Living interplanetary flight experiment: an experiment on survivability of microorganisms during interplanetary transfer |format=PDF |date= |accessdate=2009-08-20}}</ref>
* Loeb, Abraham. '']'', 29 November 2020

==See also==
{{columns-list|3|
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
}}

==References==
{{Reflist|colwidth=30em}}
* Crick F, 'Life, Its Origin and Nature', Simon and Schuster, 1981, ISBN 0-7088-2235-5
* Hoyle F, 'The Intelligent Universe', Michael Joseph Limited, London 1983, ISBN 0-7181-2298-4

==Further reading==
*{{cite journal
|last1= |first1=
|year=
|title=
|journal=]
|volume= |issue= |pages=
|bibcode=
|doi=10.1038/news040216-20
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*{{cite journal
|last1=Warmflash |first1=D.
|last2=Weiss |first2=B.
|date=24 October 2005
|title=Did Life Come from Another World?
|url=http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=did-life-come-from-anothe
|journal=]
|volume= |issue= |pages=
|bibcode=
|doi=
}}

==External links==
{{Wiktionary}}
* for a lecture on directed panspermia, dated 5 November 1976.


{{Astrobiology}}
{{Origin of life}} {{Origin of life}}
{{Astrobiology}}
{{Extraterrestrial life}} {{Extraterrestrial life}}


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Hypothesis on the interstellar spreading of primordial life This article is about the fringe theory that life permeates the universe and gave rise to life on Earth. For the mainstream hypothesis that the organic building-blocks of life originated in space, see Pseudo-panspermia.
Panspermia proposes that organisms such as bacteria, complete with their DNA, could be transported by means such as comets through space to planets including Earth.

Panspermia (from Ancient Greek πᾶν (pan) 'all' and σπέρμα (sperma) 'seed') is the hypothesis that life exists throughout the Universe, distributed by space dust, meteoroids, asteroids, comets, and planetoids, as well as by spacecraft carrying unintended contamination by microorganisms, known as directed panspermia. The theory argues that life did not originate on Earth, but instead evolved somewhere else and seeded life as we know it.

Panspermia comes in many forms, such as radiopanspermia, lithopanspermia, and directed panspermia. Regardless of its form, the theories generally propose that microbes able to survive in outer space (such as certain types of bacteria or plant spores) can become trapped in debris ejected into space after collisions between planets and small solar system bodies that harbor life. This debris containing the lifeforms is then transported by meteors between bodies in a solar system, or even across solar systems within a galaxy. In this way, panspermia studies concentrate not on how life began but on methods that may distribute it within the Universe. This point is often used as a criticism of the theory.

Panspermia is a fringe theory with little support amongst mainstream scientists. Critics argue that it does not answer the question of the origin of life but merely places it on another celestial body. It is further criticized because it cannot be tested experimentally. Historically, disputes over the merit of this theory centered on whether life is ubiquitous or emergent throughout the Universe. The theory maintains support today, with some work being done to develop mathematical treatments of how life might migrate naturally throughout the Universe. Its long history lends itself to extensive speculation and hoaxes that have arisen from meteoritic events.

In contrast, pseudo-panspermia is the well-supported hypothesis that many of the small organic molecules used for life originated in space, and were distributed to planetary surfaces.

History

Panspermia has a long history, dating back to the 5th century BCE and the natural philosopher Anaxagoras. Classicists came to agree that Anaxagoras maintained the Universe (or Cosmos) was full of life, and that life on Earth started from the fall of these extra-terrestrial seeds. Panspermia as it is known today, however, is not identical to this original theory. The name, as applied to this theory, was only first coined in 1908 by Svante Arrhenius, a Swedish scientist. Prior to this, since around the 1860s, many prominent scientists were becoming interested in the theory, for example Sir Fred Hoyle, and Chandra Wickramasinghe.

In the 1860s, there were three scientific developments that began to bring the focus of the scientific community to the problem of the origin of life. Firstly, the Kant-Laplace Nebular theory of solar system and planetary formation was gaining favor, and implied that when the Earth first formed, the surface conditions would have been inhospitable to life as we know it. This meant that life could not have evolved parallel with the Earth, and must have evolved at a later date, without biological precursors. Secondly, Charles Darwin's famous theory of evolution implied some elusive origin, because in order for something to evolve, it must start somewhere. In his Origin of Species, Darwin was unable or unwilling to touch on this issue. Third and finally, Louis Pasteur and John Tyndall experimentally disproved the (now superseded) theory of spontaneous generation, which suggested that life was constantly evolving from non-living matter and did not have a common ancestor, as suggested by Darwin's theory of evolution.

Altogether, these three developments in science presented the wider scientific community with a seemingly paradoxical situation regarding the origin of life: life must have evolved from non-biological precursors after the Earth was formed, and yet spontaneous generation as a theory had been experimentally disproved. From here, is where the study of the origin of life branched. Those who accepted Pasteur's rejection of spontaneous generation began to develop the theory that under (unknown) conditions on a primitive Earth, life must have gradually evolved from organic material. This theory became known as abiogenesis, and is the currently accepted one. On the other side of this are those scientists of the time who rejected Pasteur's results and instead supported the idea that life on Earth came from existing life. This necessarily requires that life has always existed somewhere on some planet, and that it has a mechanism of transferring between planets. Thus, the modern treatment of panspermia began in earnest.

Lord Kelvin, in a presentation to The British Association for the Advancement of Science in 1871, proposed the idea that similarly to how seeds can be transferred through the air by winds, so can life be brought to Earth by the infall of a life-bearing meteorite. He further proposed the idea that life can only come from life, and that this principle is invariant under philosophical uniformitarianism, similar to how matter can neither be created nor destroyed. This argument was heavily criticized because of its boldness, and additionally due to technical objections from the wider community. In particular, Johann Zollner from Germany argued against Kelvin by saying that organisms carried in meteorites to Earth would not survive the descent through the atmosphere due to friction heating.

The arguments went back and forth until Svante Arrhenius gave the theory its modern treatment and designation. Arrhenius argued against abiogenesis on the basis that it had no experimental foundation at the time, and believed that life had always existed somewhere in the Universe. He focused his efforts of developing the mechanism(s) by which this pervasive life may be transferred through the Universe. At this time, it was recently discovered that solar radiation can exert pressure, and thus force, on matter. Arrhenius thus concluded that it is possible that very small organisms such as bacterial spores could be moved around due to this radiation pressure.

At this point, panspermia as a theory now had a potentially viable transport mechanism, as well as a vehicle for carrying life from planet to planet. The theory still faced criticism mostly due to doubts about how long spores would actually survive under the conditions of their transport from one planet, through space, to another. Despite all the emphasis placed on trying to establish the scientific legitimacy of this theory, it still lacked testability; that was and still is a serious problem the theory has yet to overcome.

Support for the theory persisted, however, with Fred Hoyle and Chandra Wickramasinghe using two reasons for why an extra-terrestrial origin of life might be preferred. First is that required conditions for the origin of life may have been more favorable somewhere other than Earth, and second that life on Earth exhibits properties that are not accounted for by assuming an endogenic origin. Hoyle studied spectra of interstellar dust, and came to the conclusion that space contained large amounts of organics, which he suggested were the building blocks of the more complex chemical structures. Critically, Hoyle argued that this chemical evolution was unlikely to have taken place on a prebiotic Earth, and instead the most likely candidate is a comet. Furthermore, Hoyle and Wickramasinghe concluded that the evolution of life requires a large increase in genetic information and diversity, which might have resulted from the influx of viral material from space via comets. Hoyle reported (in a lecture at Oxford on January 16, 1978) a pattern of coincidence between the arrival of major epidemics and the occasions of close encounters with comets, which lead Hoyle to suggest that the epidemics were a direct result of material raining down from these comets. This claim in particular garnered criticism from biologists.

Since the 1970s, a new era of planetary exploration meant that data could be used to test panspermia and potentially transform it from conjecture to a testable theory. Though it has yet to be tested, panspermia is still explored today in some mathematical treatments, and as its long history suggests, the appeal of the theory has stood the test of time.

Overview

Core requirements

Panspermia requires:

  1. that life has always existed in the Universe somewhere
  2. that organic molecules originated in space (perhaps to be distributed to Earth)
  3. that life originated from these molecules, extraterrestrially
  4. that this extraterrestrial life was transported to Earth.

The creation and distribution of organic molecules from space is now uncontroversial; it is known as pseudo-panspermia. The jump from organic materials to life originating from space, however, is hypothetical and currently untestable.

Transport vessels

Bacterial spores and plant seeds are two common proposed vessels for panspermia. According to the theory, they could be encased in a meteorite and transported to another planet from their origin, subsequently descend through the atmosphere and populate the surface with life (see lithopanspermia below). This naturally requires that these spores and seeds have formed somewhere else, maybe even in space in the case of how panspermia deals with bacteria. Understanding of planetary formation theory and meteorites has led to the idea that some rocky bodies originating from undifferentiated parent bodies could be able to generate local conditions conducive to life. Hypothetically, internal heating from radiogenic isotopes could melt ice to provide water as well as energy. In fact, some meteorites have been found to show signs of aqueous alteration which may indicate that this process has taken place. Given that there are such large numbers of these bodies found within the Solar System, an argument can be made that they each provide a potential site for life to develop. A collision occurring in the asteroid belt could alter the orbit of one such site, and eventually deliver it to Earth.

Plant seeds can be an alternative transport vessel. Some plants produce seeds that are resistant to the conditions of space, which have been shown to lie dormant in extreme cold, vacuum, and resist short wavelength UV radiation. They are not typically proposed to have originated on space, but on another planet. Theoretically, even if a plant is partially damaged during its travel in space, the pieces could still seed life in a sterile environment. Sterility of the environment is relevant because it is unclear if the novel plant could out-compete existing life forms. This idea is based on previous evidence showing that cellular reconstruction can occur from cytoplasms released from damaged algae. Furthermore, plant cells contain obligate endosymbionts, which could be released into a new environment.

Though both plant seeds and bacterial spores have been proposed as potentially viable vehicles, their ability to not only survive in space for the required time, but also survive atmospheric entry is debated.

Space probes may be a viable transport mechanism for interplanetary cross-pollination within the Solar System. Space agencies have implemented planetary protection procedures to reduce the risk of planetary contamination, but microorganisms such as Tersicoccus phoenicis may be resistant to spacecraft assembly cleaning.

Variations of panspermia theory

Some microbes appear able to survive the planetary protection procedures applied to spacecraft in cleanrooms, intended to prevent accidental planetary contamination.

Panspermia is generally subdivided into two classes: either transfer occurs between planets of the same system (interplanetary) or between stellar systems (interstellar). Further classifications are based on different proposed transport mechanisms, as follows.

Radiopanspermia

In 1903, Svante Arrhenius proposed radiopanspermia, the theory that singular microscopic forms of life can be propagated in space, driven by the radiation pressure from stars. This is the mechanism by which light can exert a force on matter. Arrhenius argued that particles at a critical size below 1.5 μm would be propelled at high speed by radiation pressure of a star. However, because its effectiveness decreases with increasing size of the particle, this mechanism holds for very tiny particles only, such as single bacterial spores.

Counterarguments

The main criticism of radiopanspermia came from Iosif Shklovsky and Carl Sagan, who cited evidence for the lethal action of space radiation (UV and X-rays) in the cosmos. If enough of these microorganisms are ejected into space, some may rain down on a planet in a new star system after 10 years wandering interstellar space. There would be enormous death rates of the organisms due to radiation and the generally hostile conditions of space, but nonetheless this theory is considered potentially viable by some.

Data gathered by the orbital experiments ERA, BIOPAN, EXOSTACK and EXPOSE showed that isolated spores, including those of B. subtilis, were rapidly killed if exposed to the full space environment for merely a few seconds, but if shielded against solar UV, the spores were capable of surviving in space for up to six years while embedded in clay or meteorite powder (artificial meteorites). Spores would therefore need to be heavily protected against UV radiation: exposure of unprotected DNA to solar UV and cosmic ionizing radiation would break it up into its constituent bases. Rocks at least 1 meter in diameter are required to effectively shield resistant microorganisms, such as bacterial spores against galactic cosmic radiation. Additionally, exposing DNA to the ultrahigh vacuum of space alone is sufficient to cause DNA damage, so the transport of unprotected DNA or RNA during interplanetary flights powered solely by light pressure is extremely unlikely.

The feasibility of other means of transport for the more massive shielded spores into the outer Solar System—for example, through gravitational capture by comets—is unknown. There is little evidence in full support of the radiopanspermia hypothesis.

Lithopanspermia

This transport mechanism generally arose following the discovery of exoplanets, and the sudden availability of data following the growth of planetary science. Lithopanspermia is the proposed transfer of organisms in rocks from one planet to another through planetary objects such as in comets or asteroids, and remains speculative. A variant would be for organisms to travel between star systems on nomadic exoplanets or exomoons.

Although there is no concrete evidence that lithopanspermia has occurred in the Solar System, the various stages have become amenable to experimental testing.

  • Planetary ejection – For lithopanspermia to occur, microorganisms must first survive ejection from a planetary surface (assuming they do not form on meteorites, as suggested in), which involves extreme forces of acceleration and shock with associated temperature rises. Hypothetical values of shock pressures experienced by ejected rocks are obtained from Martian meteorites, which suggest pressures of approximately 5 to 55 GPa, acceleration of 3 Mm/s, jerk of 6 Gm/s and post-shock temperature increases of about 1 K to 1000 K. Though these conditions are extreme, some organisms appear able to survive them.
  • Survival in transit – Now in space, the microorganisms have to make it to their next destination for lithopanspermia to be successful. The survival of microorganisms has been studied extensively using both simulated facilities and in low Earth orbit. A large number of microorganisms have been selected for exposure experiments, both human-borne microbes (significant for future crewed missions) and extremophiles (significant for determining the physiological requirements of survival in space). Bacteria in particular can exhibit a survival mechanism whereby a colony generates a biofilm that enhances its protection against UV radiation.
  • Atmospheric entry – The final stage of lithopanspermia, is re-entry onto a viable planet via its atmosphere. This requires that the organisms are able to further survive potential atmospheric ablation. Tests of this stage could use sounding rockets and orbital vehicles. B. subtilis spores inoculated onto granite domes were twice subjected to hypervelocity atmospheric transit by launch to a ~120 km altitude on an Orion two-stage rocket. The spores survived on the sides of the rock, but not on the forward-facing surface that reached 145 °C. As photosynthetic organisms must be close to the surface of a rock to obtain sufficient light energy, atmospheric transit might act as a filter against them by ablating the surface layers of the rock. Although cyanobacteria can survive the desiccating, freezing conditions of space, the STONE experiment showed that they cannot survive atmospheric entry. Small non-photosynthetic organisms deep within rocks might survive the exit and entry process, including impact survival.

Lithopanspermia, described by the mechanism above can exist as either interplanetary or interstellar. It is possible to quantify panspermia models and treat them as viable mathematical theories. For example, a recent study of planets of the Trappist-1 planetary system, presents a model for estimating the probability of interplanetary panspermia, similar to studies in the past done about Earth-Mars panspermia. This study found that lithopanspermia is 'orders of magnitude more likely to occur' in the Trappist-1 system as opposed to the Earth-to-Mars scenario. According to their analysis, the increase in probability of lithopanspermia is linked to an increased probability of abiogenesis amongst the Trappist-1 planets. In a way, these modern treatments attempt to keep panspermia as a contributing factor to abiogenesis, as opposed to a theory that directly opposes it. In line with this, it is suggested that if biosignatures could be detected on two (or more) adjacent planets, that would provide evidence that panspermia is a potentially required mechanism for abiogenesis. As of yet, no such discovery has been made.

Lithopanspermia has also been hypothesized to operate between stellar systems. One mathematical analysis, estimating the total number of rocky or icy objects that could potentially be captured by planetary systems within the Milky Way, has concluded that lithopanspermia is not necessarily bound to a single stellar system. This not only requires these objects have life in the first place, but also that it survives the journey. Thus intragalactic lithopanspermia is heavily dependent on the survival lifetime of organisms, as well as the velocity of the transporter. Again, there is no evidence that such a process has, or can occur.

Counterarguments

The complex nature of the requirements for lithopanspermia, as well as evidence against the longevity of bacteria being able to survive under these conditions, makes lithopanspermia a difficult theory to get behind. That being said, impact events did happen a lot in the early stages of the solar system formation, and still happen to a certain degree today within the asteroid belt.

Directed panspermia

Main article: Directed panspermia

First proposed in 1972 by Nobel prize winner Francis Crick, along with Leslie Orgel, directed panspermia is the theory that life was deliberately brought to Earth by a higher intelligent being from another planet. In light of the evidence at the time that it seems unlikely for an organism to have been delivered to Earth via radiopanspermia or lithopanspermia, Crick and Orgel proposed this as an alternative theory, though it is worth noting that Orgel was less serious about the claim. They do acknowledge that the scientific evidence is lacking, but discuss what kinds of evidence would be needed to support the theory. In a similar vein, Thomas Gold suggested that life on Earth might have originated accidentally from a pile of 'Cosmic Garbage' dumped on Earth long ago by extraterrestrial beings. These theories are often considered more science fiction, however, Crick and Orgel use the principle of cosmic reversibility to argue for it.

This principle is based on the fact that if our species is capable of infecting a sterile planet, then what is preventing another technological society from having done that to Earth in the past? They concluded that it would be possible to deliberately infect another planet in the foreseeable future. As far as evidence goes, Crick and Orgel argued that given the universality of the genetic code, it follows that an infective theory for life is viable.

Directed panspermia could, in theory, be demonstrated by finding a distinctive 'signature' message had been deliberately implanted into either the genome or the genetic code of the first microorganisms by our hypothetical progenitor, some 4 billion years ago. However, there is no known mechanism that could prevent mutation and natural selection from removing such a message over long periods of time.

Counterarguments

In 1972, both abiogenesis and panspermia were seen as viable theories by different experts. Given this, Crick and Orgel argued that experimental evidence required to validate one theory over the other was lacking. That being said, evidence strongly in favor of abiogenesis over panspermia exists today, whereas evidence for panspermia, particularly directed panspermia, is decidedly lacking.

Origination and distribution of organic molecules: Pseudo-panspermia

Main article: Pseudo-panspermia

Pseudo-panspermia is the well-supported hypothesis that many of the small organic molecules used for life originated in space, and were distributed to planetary surfaces. Life then emerged on Earth, and perhaps on other planets, by the processes of abiogenesis. Evidence for pseudo-panspermia includes the discovery of organic compounds such as sugars, amino acids, and nucleobases in meteorites and other extraterrestrial bodies, and the formation of similar compounds in the laboratory under outer space conditions. A prebiotic polyester system has been explored as an example.

Hoaxes & speculations

Orgueil meteorite

On May 14, 1864, twenty fragments from a meteorite crashed into the French city of Orgueil. A separate fragment of the Orgueil meteorite (kept in a sealed glass jar since its discovery) was found in 1965 to have a seed capsule embedded in it, while the original glassy layer on the outside remained undisturbed. Despite great initial excitement, the seed was found to be that of a European Juncaceae or rush plant that had been glued into the fragment and camouflaged using coal dust. The outer "fusion layer" was in fact glue. While the perpetrator of this hoax is unknown, it is thought that they sought to influence the 19th-century debate on spontaneous generation—rather than panspermia—by demonstrating the transformation of inorganic to biological matter.

Oumuamua

Main article: Oumuamua

In 2017, the Pan-STARRS telescope in Hawaii detected a reddish object up to 400 meters in length. Analysis of its orbit provided evidence that it was an interstellar object, originating from outside our Solar System. From this Avi Loeb speculated that the object was instead an artifact from an alien civilization and could potentially be evidence for directed panspermia. This claim has been considered unlikely by other authors.

See also

References

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