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This is about as close as we can get for carbon-based life habitable planet. 2.6 times the radius of Earth and mostly ocean, what sort of marine lives swim in there? Give me chills if they exist.

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[-] HurlingDurling@lemmy.world 6 points 6 months ago

Not necessarily, life on earth has existed since before there was oxigen in the atmosphere and was mostly carbon monoxide.

[-] TropicalDingdong@lemmy.world 8 points 6 months ago

Yeah not in a way detectable to radio telescopes though. If an atmosphere is stoichemetrically 'far' from equilibrium, this implies a biogeochemcical process that is pushing it out of equilibrium.

Oxygen very quickly gets reduced out of the atmosphere. Thats the whole point of it as a bioindicator molecule. There aren't many other species of molecule that are such a clear indicator of the presence of redox reactions. Preter oxidative respiration, If nitrogen was the electron receptor, but its species like ammonia might be visible via radio telescope. Google great oxygen holocaust. We know photosynthesis was happening before then, but oxygen wasn't the terminal electron receptor.

Oxygen would be a smoking gun, because you don't keep oxygen in an atmosphere if something isn't replenishing it.

[-] HurlingDurling@lemmy.world 1 points 6 months ago

I understand, good point

this post was submitted on 08 Mar 2024
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Astronomy

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