Scientists on Friday identified two complex organic molecules, or building blocks of life, on a comet for the first time, shedding new light on the cosmic origins of planets like Earth.
Ethyl alcohol and a simple sugar known as glycolaldehyde were detected in Comet Lovejoy, said the study in the journal Science Advances.
“These complex organic molecules may be part of the rocky material from which planets are formed,” said the study.
Other organic molecules have previously been discovered in comets, most recently in comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko, on which the European space agency’s Philae lander found several organic molecules — including four never detected before on a comet.
Since comets contain some of the oldest and most primitive material in the solar system, scientists regard them as time capsules, offering a peek at how life on Earth started 4.6 billion years ago.
But while the latest study does not end the debate over whether falling comets indeed seeded Earth with the components necessary for life, it does add something to our knowledge, said study co-author Dominique Bockelée-Morvan, an astrophysicist at the French National Center for Scientific Research.
“The presence of a major complex organic molecule in comet material is an essential step toward better understanding the conditions that prevailed at the moment when life emerged on our planet,” she told AFP.
“These observations show a possible explanation for its (life’s) origin on our planet,” she added.
Read more at Discovery News
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