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9780521875486

Planetary Systems and the Origins of Life

by
  • ISBN13:

    9780521875486

  • ISBN10:

    052187548X

  • Edition: 1st
  • Format: Hardcover
  • Copyright: 2007-12-24
  • Publisher: Cambridge University Press

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Summary

Several major breakthroughs in the last decade have helped contribute to the emerging field of astrobiology. Focusing on these developments, this fascinating book explores some of the most important problems in this field. It examines how planetary systems formed, and how water and the biomolecules necessary for life were produced. It then focuses on how life may have originated and evolved on Earth. Building on these two themes, the final section takes the reader on a search for life elsewhere in the Solar System. It presents the latest results of missions to Mars and Titan, and explores the possibilities of life in the ice-covered ocean of Europa. This interdisciplinary book is an enjoyable overview of this exciting field for students and researchers in astrophysics, planetary science, geosciences, biochemistry, and evolutionary biology. Colour versions of some of the figures are available at www.cambridge.org/9780521875486.

Author Biography

Ralph Pudritz is Director of the Origins Institute and a Professor in the Department of Physics and Astronomy at McMaster University Paul Higgs is Canada Research Chair in Biophysics and a Professor in the Department of Physics and Astronomy at McMaster University Jonathon Stone is Associate Director of the Origins Institute and SharcNet Chair in Computational Biology in the Department of Biology at McMaster University

Table of Contents

List of contributorsp. xi
Prefacep. xv
Planetary systems and the origins of lifep. 1
Observations of extrasolar planetary systemsp. 3
Introductionp. 3
RV detectionsp. 4
Transit detectionsp. 7
Properties of the extrasolar planetsp. 10
Other methods of detectionp. 14
Future prospects for space missionsp. 16
Acknowledgementsp. 17
Referencesp. 17
The atmospheres of extrasolar planetsp. 21
Introductionp. 21
The primary eclipsep. 21
The secondary eclipsep. 23
Characteristics of known transiting planetsp. 25
Spectroscopyp. 27
Model atmospheresp. 30
Observationsp. 32
Future missionsp. 35
Summaryp. 37
Referencesp. 38
Terrestrial planet formationp. 41
Introductionp. 41
The formation of planetesimalsp. 42
The growth of protoplanetsp. 43
The growth of planetsp. 47
The origin of the Earth-Moon systemp. 52
Terrestrial planets and lifep. 52
Summaryp. 56
Acknowledgementsp. 57
Referencesp. 57
From protoplanetary disks to prebiotic amino acids and the origin of the genetic codep. 62
Introductionp. 62
Protoplanetary disks and the formation of planet systemsp. 63
Protoplanetary disks and the formation of biomoleculesp. 68
Measurements and experiments on amino acid synthesisp. 71
A role for thermodynamicsp. 73
The RNA world and the origin of the genetic codep. 76
How was the genetic code optimized?p. 80
Protein evolutionp. 82
Summaryp. 84
Acknowledgementsp. 84
Referencesp. 84
Emergent phenomena in biology: the origin of cellular lifep. 89
Introductionp. 89
Defining emergencep. 89
Emergence of life: a very brief historyp. 90
The first emergent phenomena: self-assembly processes on the early Earthp. 91
Sources of amphiphilic moleculesp. 92
The emergence of primitive cellsp. 95
Self-assembly processes in prebiotic organic mixturesp. 100
Emergence of membrane functionsp. 101
Emergence of growth processes in primitive cellsp. 103
Environmental constraints on the first forms of lifep. 105
Acknowledgementsp. 106
Referencesp. 106
Life on Earthp. 111
Extremophiles: defining the envelope for the search for life in the universep. 113
Introductionp. 113
What is an extremophile?p. 114
Categories of extremophilesp. 115
Environmental extremesp. 115
How do they do it?p. 123
Examples of extreme ecosystemsp. 125
Space: new categories of extreme environmentsp. 126
Life in the Solar System?p. 127
Conclusionsp. 130
Acknowledgementsp. 131
Referencesp. 131
Hyperthermophilic life on Earth - and on Mars?p. 135
Introductionp. 135
Biotopesp. 136
Sampling and cultivationp. 138
Phylogenetic implicationsp. 139
Physiologic propertiesp. 141
Examples of recent HT organismsp. 143
Referencesp. 147
Phylogenomics: how far back in the past can we go?p. 149
Introductionp. 149
The principles of phylogenetic inferencep. 149
Artefacts affecting phylogenetic reconstructionp. 152
Strengths and limitations of phylogenomicsp. 155
The importance of secondary simplificationp. 160
The tree of lifep. 164
Frequent strong claims made with weak evidence in their favourp. 167
Conclusionsp. 171
Acknowledgementsp. 171
Referencesp. 172
Horizontal gene transfer, gene histories, and the root of the tree of lifep. 178
Introductionp. 178
How to analyse multigene data?p. 179
What does the plurality consensus represent? Example of small marine cyanobacteriap. 182
Where is the root of the 'tree of life'?p. 183
Use of higher order characters: example of ATPasesp. 185
Conclusionsp. 188
Acknowledgementsp. 188
Referencesp. 188
Evolutionary innovation versus ecological incumbencyp. 193
The Ediacaran worldp. 193
Preservational contextp. 194
Vendobionts as giant protozoansp. 195
Kimberella as a stem-group molluscp. 198
Worm burrowsp. 202
Stability of ecosystemsp. 203
The parasite connectionp. 204
Conclusionsp. 207
Acknowledgementsp. 208
Referencesp. 208
Gradual origin for the metazoansp. 210
Introductionp. 210
Collagen as a trait tying together metazoansp. 211
The critical oxygen concentration criterionp. 212
The Burgess Shale fauna: a radiation on rocky groundp. 213
Accumulating evidence about snowball Earthp. 215
North of 80[degree]p. 216
Conclusionp. 219
Acknowledgementsp. 219
Referencesp. 219
Life in the Solar System?p. 223
The search for life on Marsp. 225
Introductionp. 225
Mars today and the Viking search for lifep. 227
Search for second genesisp. 229
Detecting a second genesis on Marsp. 235
Conclusionsp. 238
Referencesp. 238
Life in the dark dune spots of Mars: a testable hypothesisp. 241
Introductionp. 241
Historyp. 241
Basic facts and considerations about DDSsp. 243
Challenges and answersp. 250
Partial analogues on Earthp. 255
Discussion and outlookp. 257
Acknowledgementsp. 258
Referencesp. 258
Titan: a new astrobiological vision from the Cassini-Huygens datap. 263
Introductionp. 263
Analogies between Titan and the Earthp. 264
A complex prebiotic-like chemistryp. 271
Life on Titan?p. 278
Conclusionsp. 280
Acknowledgementsp. 281
Referencesp. 282
Europa, the ocean moon: tides, permeable ice, and lifep. 285
Introduction: life beyond the habitable zonep. 285
The surface of Europap. 286
Tidesp. 295
The permeable crust: conditions for a European biospherep. 305
Acknowledgementsp. 309
Referencesp. 309
Indexp. 313
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved.

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