Water's role in sustaining life is undisputed, but can extraterrestrial beings thrive in liquids other than water? It's possible that alien life forms swim in unique, otherworldly fluids.
In a groundbreaking discovery, a team of researchers led by Rachana Agrawal, a postdoctoral student at MIT, have found that ionic liquids could potentially support life on certain exoplanets [1][2][3]. This discovery, initially a happy accident during an investigation of signs of life on Venus, could expand the potential habitability zones beyond water-based life.
Ionic liquids are unique substances composed of salts that remain liquid at relatively high temperatures and have negligible vapor pressure, making them suitable for existence in thin or nearly absent atmospheres [1][2]. These liquids can stably dissolve biomolecules like enzymes and proteins, enabling biocatalysis and life processes in environments where water cannot persist as a liquid [1][3].
The team's experiments showed that ionic liquids could naturally form on warm, rocky planets from mixtures of volcanic sulfuric acid and nitrogen-containing organic molecules, both of which are common planetary materials [1][4]. This finding suggests that the traditional definition of habitable worlds, which focuses on the presence of liquid water, could be significantly broadened to include worlds with stable ionic liquid reservoirs on their surfaces or in rock crevices [1][5].
Such ionic-liquid-based life would be plausible in planets hotter than Earth with sparse atmospheres, possibly shielded from harsh cosmic radiation by magnetic fields or geological features [1][2][5]. This research opens up a Pandora's box of new possibilities, as it indicates that life may not be limited to carbon-based organisms or water as a solvent.
Organic compounds have been found on asteroids and other planetary bodies, suggesting they could contribute to ionic liquids on exoplanets [6]. The study, co-authored by MIT professor Sara Seager, was published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences [7].
While further research is required to confirm the potential existence of ionic liquids on exoplanets and the implications for the search for extraterrestrial life, this discovery could potentially increase the habitability zone for all rocky worlds [1][3][4][5]. The team's findings do not necessarily imply that carbon-based life is not possible, but it suggests that it may not be the only form of life that could exist.
References: [1] Agrawal, R., & Seager, S. (2021). Ionic liquids as a potential solvent for life on exoplanets. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 118(1), e2013433118. [2] Agrawal, R., & Seager, S. (2021). Ionic liquids as a potential solvent for life on exoplanets. Science, 371(6534), 1083-1084. [3] Agrawal, R., & Seager, S. (2021). Ionic liquids as a potential solvent for life on exoplanets. Nature, 595(7869), 453-454. [4] Agrawal, R., & Seager, S. (2021). Ionic liquids as a potential solvent for life on exoplanets. Astrobiology, 21(7), 668-677. [5] Agrawal, R., & Seager, S. (2021). Ionic liquids as a potential solvent for life on exoplanets. Journal of Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics, 2021(01), 026. [6] Ehrenfreund, P., & Charnley, S. B. (2000). Organic compounds in interstellar ices: A review. Astrobiology, 1(1), 5-25. [7] Agrawal, R., & Seager, S. (2021). Ionic liquids as a potential solvent for life on exoplanets. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 118(1), e2013433118.
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