Life Could be Common Across the Universe, Just Not in Our Region

The building blocks of life can, and did, spontaneously assemble under the right conditions. That’s called spontaneous generation, or abiogenesis. Of course, many of the details remain hidden to us, and we just don’t know exactly how it all happened. Or how frequently it could happen.

The world’s religions have different ideas of how life appeared, of course, and they invoke the magical hands of various supernatural deities to explain it all. But those explanations, while colorful tales, leave many of us unsatisfied. ‘How did life arise’ is one of life’s most compelling questions, and one that science continually wrestles with.

Tomonori Totani is one scientist who finds that question compelling. Totani is a professor of Astronomy at the University of Tokyo. He’s written a new paper titled “Emergence of life in an inflationary universe.” It’s published in Nature Scientific Reports.

Prof. Totani’s work leans heavily on a couple concepts. The first is the vast age and size of the Universe, how it’s inflated over time, and how likely events are to occur. The second is RNA; specifically, how long a chain of nucleotides needs to be in order to “expect a self-replicating activity” as the paper says.

Totani’s work, like almost all work on abiogenesis, looks at the basic components of life on Earth: RNA, or ribonucleic acid. DNA sets the rules for how individual life forms take shape, but DNA is much more complex than RNA. RNA is still more complex, by orders of magnitude, than the raw chemicals and molecules found in space or on the surface of a planet or moon. But its simplicity compared to DNA makes it more likely to occur via abiogenesis.

There’s also one theory in evolution saying that although DNA carries the instructions to build an organism, it’s RNA that regulates the transcription of DNA sequences. It’s called RNA-based evolution, and it says that RNA is subject to Darwinian natural selection, and is also heritable. That’s some of the rationale behind looking at RNA vs DNA.

Double-stranded RNA. Image Credit: By Supyyyy – Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=69928834

RNA is a chain of chemicals known as nucleotides. Some research shows that a chain of nucleotides needs to be at least 40 to 100 nucleotides long before the self-replicating behaviour called life can exist. Over time, enough nucleotides can form a chain to meet that length requirement. But the question is, has there been enough time in the life of the Universe? Well, we’re here, so the answer must be yes, mustn’t it?

But wait. According to a press release announcing this new paper, “… current estimates suggest that magic number of 40 to 100 nucleotides should not have been possible in the volume of space we consider the observable universe.”

The key here is the term ‘observable universe.’

<Click to Enlarge>  Logarithmic map of the observable universe. From left to right, spacecraft and celestial bodies are arranged according to their proximity to the Earth. Image Credit: By Pablo Carlos Budassi - Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=74584660
<Click to Enlarge> Logarithmic map of the observable universe. From left to right, spacecraft and celestial bodies are arranged according to their proximity to the Earth. Image Credit: By Pablo Carlos Budassi – Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=74584660

“However, there is more to the universe than the observable,” said Totani. “In contemporary cosmology, it is agreed the universe underwent a period of rapid inflation producing a vast region of expansion beyond the horizon of what we can directly observe. Factoring this greater volume into models of abiogenesis hugely increases the chances of life occurring.”

Our Universe came into being during the Big Bang, a single inflation event. According to Totani’s paper, our Universe “likely includes more than 10100 Sun-like stars,” whereas the observable Universe only contains about 10 sextillion (1022) stars. We know that life has occurred at least once, so it’s not out of the question that abiogenesis occurred at least once more, even if the chances are infinitesimally tiny.

 Diagram of evolution of the (observable part) of the universe from the Big Bang (left), the CMB-reference afterglow, to the present. Image Credit: By NASA/WMAP Science Team - Original version: NASA; modified by Cherkash, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=11885244
Diagram of evolution of the (observable part) of the universe from the Big Bang (left), the CMB-reference afterglow, to the present. Image Credit: By NASA/WMAP Science Team – Original version: NASA; modified by Cherkash, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=11885244

According to statistics, the amount of matter in the observable Universe should only be able to produce RNA that is 20 nucleotides long, well under the 40 to 100 number. But because of rapid inflation, much of the Universe is unobservable. It’s simply too far away for light emitted since the Big Bang to reach us. When cosmologists add up the number of stars in the observable Universe with the number of stars in the unobservable Universe, the resulting number is 10100 Sun-like stars. That means there is much more matter in play, and the abiogenic creation of long enough chains of RNA is not only possible, but probable, or even inevitable.

In his paper, Professor Totani states the basic relationship under investigation. “Here, a quantitative relation is derived between the minimum RNA length lmin required to be the first biological polymer, and the universe size necessary to expect the formation of such a long and active RNA by randomly adding monomers.”

Is it getting confusing? Here’s a hopefully more manageable summary.

“Therefore, if extraterrestrial organisms of a different origin from those on Earth are discovered in the future, it would imply an unknown mechanism at work to polymerize nucleotides much faster than random statistical processes.”

Professor Tomonori Totani, Tokyo University

The Universe is larger than its observable portion, and likely contains 10100 Sun-like stars. For the probability of abiotic creation of RNA on an Earth-like planet to equal 1, or unity, then the minimum nucleotide length must be less than about 20 nucleotides, which is much smaller than the initially stated minimum of 40 nucleotides.

But scientists don’t think that RNA only 20 nucleotides long can be self-replicating, at least not from our perspective as observers of terrestrial life. As Totani says in his paper, “Therefore, if extraterrestrial organisms of a different origin from those on Earth are discovered in the future, it would imply an unknown mechanism at work to polymerize nucleotides much faster than random statistical processes.”

What would that process be?

Who knows, but this is likely an inflection point where people of faith can chime in and say, “Why God, of course.”

 The famous The Creation of Adam on the Sistine Chapel ceiling, by Michelangelo c. 1512. By Michelangelo Buonarroti - [1], Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=1326019
The famous The Creation of Adam on the Sistine Chapel ceiling, by Michelangelo c. 1512. By Michelangelo Buonarroti – [1], Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=1326019

Totani’s work has by no means provided an answer. But like a lot of scientific work, it helps refine the question, and invites other to study it.

“Like many in this field of research, I am driven by curiosity and by big questions,” said Totani. “Combining my recent investigation into RNA chemistry with my long history of cosmology leads me to realize there is a plausible way the universe must have gone from an abiotic (lifeless) state to a biotic one. It’s an exciting thought and I hope research can build on this to uncover the origins of life.”

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4 Replies to “Life Could be Common Across the Universe, Just Not in Our Region”

  1. This superficially looks like another take on Koonin’s “Biological Big Bang model” [ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1973067/ ].

    It is unlikely it was that hard, integrated genomic and fossil evidence says life evolved early [ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6152910/pdf/emss-78644.pdf ].

    If life evolved in alkaline hydrothermal vents as both genomic and geological evidence says respectively implies [ http://astrobiology.com/2020/03/hydrogen-energy-is-at-the-root-of-life.html , https://www.sciencemag.org/news/2016/07/our-last-common-ancestor-inhaled-hydrogen-underwater-volcanoes ], those vents could feasibly have condensation reactions and replicate RNA strands [ https://www.chemistryworld.com/features/hydrothermal-vents-and-the-origins-of-life/3007088.article , https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/1515740/1/Whicher_Thesis.pdf ]. But the exact pathway is not strictly necessary if the tree evidence is supported and credible.

  2. I don’t really see how any meaningful probability could be calculated in the first place, at this point in human knowledge. Unless modern supercomputers can actually do this: start with only big bang type initial conditions, and after long computation, end up showing planets with water, rings, moons, etc. similar to what we see. I don’t know though – can they? Because those are the conditions that would determine how likely life is to arise. Also, do we know what those conditions are anyway? Has artificial life been shown to arise in simulations so we know exactly what it takes?

    1. – “meaningful probability”.

      You can argue about “meaningful” and what “probability” of course, but the article suggest one way. Spoiler alert: Likelihood for life elsewhere is 1.

      And my comment suggest another which has been published years ago [Lineweaver et al, IIRC]. By assuming that it is a process, so likely repeatable, you can at the very least do bayesian estimates of rates of life occurrence on Earth analogs. So that would give you credibility instead of uncertainty, but biologists are good with that. (Say phylogenies often have both. In trees bayesian methods are optimistic while maximum likelihood are pessimistic – using both you can box in the quantification of the tree. I hear that generally the situation is the reverse, but I know too little about statistics in general to say if its so and if it applies here.)

      – “Also, do we know what those conditions are anyway?”

      Already linked to in my previous comment on the article. Again, you can argue, but this time you will argue with a consensus. 🙂

      – “Has artificial life been shown to arise in simulations so we know exactly what it takes?”

      Like Conway’s Game of Life you mean? It essentially restates evolution conditions, so no surprises there.

      1. Oops, I should say that trees *should* quantify both types of tree models. (Else they are not to be trusted.)

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