There’s been a big claim of a marker of life, known as a biosignature, found using JWST in the atmosphere of an exoplanet known as K2-18b. The data also confirmed this planet was a “Hycean” world, a planet with a liquid water ocean surrounded by a hydrogen dominated atmosphere. The biosignature that’s claimed to have been found is dimethyl sulphide, a molecule that on Earth is mostly produced by phytoplankton.
Dr. Becky
@corlin I love her but all astrophysics folks will always deny signs of life. Let's talk to an astrobiologist... AND IMO a confluence of data is better than requiring that each item ONLY be created by life on Earth.
@TrueBloodNet @corlin I'm not an astrobiologist but the fact this planet orbits a red dwarf is immediately disqualifying for life.
Also, there are 13 habitable zones. Liquid water is only one of them. Liquid water is necessary but insufficient on its own to support life. BTW, water might be the most common compound in the entire universe. Comets are basically dirty snowballs.
@danielbsmith @corlin You might have stopped with, "I'm not an astrobiologist'.
Orbiting a red dwarf is NOT disqualifying. It does present some issue but your absolutism is unsupportable.
As I understand it Red Dwarf stars could only host life bearing planets if they are very old, and have settled down. Young Red Dwarf stars produce huge amounts of UV radiation. That can fluctuate wildly over a matter of days or weeks.By 4 or 5 orders of magnitude.
So old RD, maybe, Young one, no chance.
@corlin @TrueBloodNet Old is out too since life takes time. At some point that life would have been on the planet when the star was young. Changes in the luminosity of the star over time are also problematic. Space travel poses it's own challenges. At best we're talking bacterial life. They don't build spaceships.
@danielbsmith @corlin LOL No one was talking about space traveling life forms. Are you an AI bot and/or is English not your primary language? If the latter, I don't want to judge you on your unproven statements.
@TrueBloodNet @corlin LOL yourself. No, I just know what the odds actually are for life to exist anywhere in the entire universe and they're not good. I have a pinned thread on this.
@danielbsmith and your evidence for an Old Earth creator is?
@CanisPundit @TrueBloodNet @corlin Science can neither prove nor disprove the existence of a supernatural Being. Science can only test and measure the natural world. God, by definition, is supernatural.