Building block of life found in comet tail

Strengthening the argument that life in the universe might be more common than previously thought, scientists have found traces of a key building block of biology in dust snatched from the tail of a comet.

Scientists at Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., have uncovered glycine, the simplest amino acid and a vital compound necessary for life, in a sample from the comet Wild 2. The sample was captured by NASA’s Stardust spacecraft, which dropped it into the Utah desert in 2006.

“By detecting glycine, we now know that comets could have delivered amino acids to the early Earth, contributing to the ingredients that life originated from,” said Jamie Elsila, a research scientist at Goddard and co-author of a paper outlining the discovery in the journal Meteoritics and Planetary Science.

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The idea that the ingredients for life were delivered to Earth from the nursery of space, rather than developing out of the Earth’s original chemical soup, has been around for years. Amino acids previously have been discovered in meteorites.

But this is the first time an amino acid has turned up in comet material.

“This is yet another piece of evidence that the ingredients for life are ubiquitous. These building blocks of life are everywhere,” said Carl Pilcher, director of NASA’s Astrobiology Institute, which helped fund the research.

The Stardust spacecraft, managed jointly by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., and Lockheed Martin Space Systems in Denver, was launched in 1999 on a 2.9-billion-mile journey that made two loops around the sun before meeting up five years later with Wild 2, which orbits between Mars and Jupiter.

Flying as close as 147 miles to the comet, Stardust passed through its tail of dust and gas.

At its closest approach, the craft deployed a collector packed with a substance called aerogel, which harvested comet particles. The spacecraft then returned to Earth’s orbit and jettisoned a capsule containing the sample. The capsule landed in Utah in 2006.

Jason Dworkin, a co-author of the research paper, said glycine was first detected a few months after the sample landed. The next two years, he said, were spent verifying the result.

Don Brownlee, a University of Washington astronomer who served as chief scientist on the Stardust mission, called the work “a real tour-de-force technologically to make these measurements in such small samples.”

Brownlee said the result is exciting because it represents a second, very large source of life-giving material. He estimated that there are as many as a trillion comets in and around the solar system, many of them located in the chilly Kuiper Belt beyond Pluto, or in the Oort Cloud even farther out.

“There has been a huge question of where the pre-biotic compounds came from on Earth,” Brownlee said. “Did they come from space? Or were they made here? Or maybe they came from both places.”

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