Study suggests Earth may seed Venus with life

A recent modeling study indicates that asteroid impacts on Earth could have transferred microbial life to Venus over billions of years. Researchers presented findings at the 2026 Lunar and Planetary Science Conference showing that material from Earth might survive the journey and persist briefly in Venus' clouds.

Researchers from The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory and Sandia National Laboratories applied the Venus Life Equation to assess the likelihood of such transfers. Their calculations estimate that roughly 100 cells from Earth could disperse into Venus' clouds each year, totaling about 20 billion cells over the past billion years.

The study builds on the theory of panspermia, which proposes that life or its building blocks can travel between planets via rocky objects. Models of bolide entry into Venus' atmosphere suggest fragments could remain suspended long enough for potential survival.

Scientists note significant uncertainties remain in the parameters, similar to challenges in the Drake Equation. If future missions detect life in Venus' clouds, one explanation could be an origin on Earth rather than local development.

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Scientists suggest that asteroid impacts created hot, chemical-rich environments that could have kick-started life on Earth. A new review led by recent Rutgers graduate Shea Cinquemani highlights impact-generated hydrothermal systems as potential cradles for life's building blocks. These systems may have persisted for thousands of years, providing ideal conditions for early biology.

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A team of researchers has introduced a new method to detect extraterrestrial life by identifying statistical patterns across multiple planets rather than focusing on individual worlds. Led by Harrison B. Smith and Lana Sinapayen, the approach relies on life's potential to spread between planets and alter their environments. This 'agnostic biosignature' could help prioritize observations amid limited telescope time.

NASA’s Perseverance rover has detected large, complex carbon molecules on rocks in Jezero Crater that show patterns resembling ancient microbial activity on Earth.

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A team of astronomers in Japan has discovered evidence of a faint atmosphere surrounding the small trans-Neptunian object 2002 XV93. Previously, only Pluto was known to retain an atmosphere among bodies beyond Neptune due to its stronger gravity. The finding, made via a rare stellar occultation on January 10, 2024 and published in Nature Astronomy, indicates a short-lived atmosphere requiring continuous replenishment.

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