logo
Scientists find strongest-ever evidence of alien life on distant planet

Scientists find strongest-ever evidence of alien life on distant planet

Independent17-04-2025
Scientists have detected what they believe to be a potential sign of life on a planet in a different solar system in the 'strongest indicator' that life exists beyond Earth.
Researchers analyzing K2-18b, which orbits a star 120 lightyears from Earth, have found a molecule that on Earth is associated with living organisms in the planet's atmosphere.
The potentially Earth-shattering study was published Wednesday in the Astrophysical Journal Letters.
"This is the strongest evidence yet there is possibly life out there. I can realistically say that we can confirm this signal within one to two years,' astronomer Nikku Madhusudhan, a professor at the University of Cambridge and the lead author of the new study, told the BBC.
The findings could even suggest that K2-18b is covered with an ocean, home to living organisms.
His team observed large amounts of chemicals that, when found on Earth, are produced by marine phytoplankton and bacteria; the quantity of these molecules found in K2-18b's atmosphere is thousands of times higher than what's on Earth, he said.
"So, if the association with life is real, then this planet will be teeming with life," he told the BBC. "If we confirm that there is life on K2-18b it should basically confirm that life is very common in the galaxy.'
'It is in no one's interest to claim prematurely that we have detected life,' Madhusudhan told the New York Times.
Mans Holmberg, a co-author of the study and a postdoctoral researcher at the Space Telescope Science Institute, told The Washington Post that the observations suggest the planet could boast a hydrogen-rich atmosphere and an ocean deeper than any on Earth.
'Everything about this system is quite alien. We don't have anything like it in the solar system,' he said.
Other experts in the field remarked on the potential magnitude of the revelation, but urged caution before drawing any sweeping conclusions.
'It's not nothing,' Stephen Schmidt, a planetary scientist at Johns Hopkins University, told the Times. 'It's a hint. But we cannot conclude it's habitable yet.'
"I think this is one of those situations where extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence," Laura Kreidberg, an astronomer at the Max Planck Institute for Astronomy in Germany, told NPR. "I'm not sure we're at the extraordinary evidence level yet."
There's an ongoing debate about the presence of the molecules on the planet as well as what they could mean, and if they are in fact there. For example, the chemicals could relate to a process unrelated to living organisms on K2-18b.
The research team agreed.
'Either we are looking at a new chemical process that we haven't seen before … or we're witnessing the first signs of biological activity outside of Earth,' Holmberg said.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

People Fixing the World  How seaweed is surprisingly useful
People Fixing the World  How seaweed is surprisingly useful

BBC News

time3 hours ago

  • BBC News

People Fixing the World How seaweed is surprisingly useful

From powering cars to feeding farm animals, how using seaweed more can help the planet. We hear how a local business in Barbados is using sargassum seaweed to power cars, providing an eco-friendly alternative for islanders and potentially helping to clear the beaches of smelly seaweed. Also we visit the European company aiming to replace single-use plastics with seaweed-based packaging. And how feeding seaweed to cattle can dramatically cut emissions of planet-warming methane gas. People Fixing The World from the BBC is about brilliant solutions to the world's problems. We release a new edition every week. We'd love you to let us know what you think and to hear about your own solutions. You can contact us on WhatsApp by messaging +44 8000 321721 or email peoplefixingtheworld@ And please leave us a review on your chosen podcast provider. (Image: A person holding clumps of dulse seaweed in Canada, James MacDonald/Bloomberg)

Harvard scientist warns 'hostile' alien craft could strike Earth in just months
Harvard scientist warns 'hostile' alien craft could strike Earth in just months

Daily Mail​

time6 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Harvard scientist warns 'hostile' alien craft could strike Earth in just months

A respected Harvard astrophysicist has revealed new evidence suggesting that the mysterious object barreling toward Earth this December is an alien craft. Professor Avi Loeb and his team found that the supposed comet known as 3I/ATLAS is on an extremely unusual course that will take it close to three different planets: Venus, Mars, and Jupiter. Loeb explained that 3I/ATLAS's course is so rare the chance of a natural space rock randomly flying along that path is less than 0.005 percent. Based on those findings, Loeb, an outspoken believer in UFOs, has concluded that 3I/ATLAS may be an alien probe sent to this solar system by an unknown intelligence. Moreover, Loeb said that such a craft and the beings who control it would have one of two motives, one being harmless and the other being hostile. 'The consequences, should the hypothesis turn out to be correct, could potentially be dire for humanity, and would possibly require defensive measures to be undertaken (though these might prove futile),' Loeb and his team warned in their new study. The researchers' theory emerged from a grim scientific concept called the dark forest hypothesis, which assumes that other intelligent civilizations in the galaxy would be hostile and likely view humanity as a threat that needs to be attacked. In 2021, Loeb theorized that Oumuamua, the first interstellar object which passed through our solar system, may have also been an alien probe, citing its strange cigar-like shape and its ability to speed up without the influence of gravity. In May, Professor Loeb was one of the keynote speakers at a congressional hearing regarding UFO sightings. At that event, he said 'there are objects in the sky that we don't understand' while calling for increased funding for UFO detection. Loeb has also claimed that up to 10 percent of the metal fragments recovered from the Pacific Ocean contain 'alien' elements not seen in our solar system. Those remnants came from a meteor-like object that originated from interstellar space and crashed off the coast of Papua New Guinea in 2014. However, Loeb has maintained that the object could have been an alien craft, or at least debris from one. This month, Loeb and co-authors Adam Drowl and Adam Hibberd from the space research non-profit Initiative for Interstellar Studies found other pieces of evidence that suggest 3I/ATLAS is not your average comet. First, its massive size, which studies estimate as between seven and 12 miles long, would make it significantly larger than Oumuamua (300 to 1,300 feet long). Scientists have said that interstellar objects that large should be extremely rare in the cosmos, making 3I/ATLAS's visit to our solar system a statistical long-shot. Loeb's study also revealed 3I/ATLAS does not have a coma, a cloud of gas and dust that typically surround comets. The team said this suggests the giant object is therefore not a comet, which should have a smaller core and be part of a larger population of interstellar objects. Combined with the one-in-20,000 chance of making close passes by multiple planets this year, Loeb argued the possibility that the object headed toward Earth could be artificial can't be ignored. 'When viewed from an open-minded and unprejudiced perspective, these investigations have revealed many compelling insights into the possibility that 3I/ATLAS is technological,' Loeb explained. Their new study was published to the pre-print server arXiv on July 17, meaning the research has not been peer-reviewed yet. Whether it's a comet or an alien craft, 3I/ATLAS is expected to pass by Earth on December 17, speeding through the solar system at more than 41 miles per second (roughly 150,000 miles per hour). On its current trajectory, it'll come within 2.4 astronomical units of our planet (223 million miles). An astronomical unit (AU) is equal to the distance between Earth and the sun, 93 million miles. Technically, 3I/ATLAS has been in the solar system for weeks, and was roughly four AU away from Earth in early July. In October, it'll make its closest approach to a planet, coming within 0.4 AU (37 million miles) of Mars. Loeb's previous analysis of the massive object has found that it has come from a thicker part of the Milky Way galaxy's disk, where older stars are found. The 12-mile-wide visitor is believed to be older than our sun, which is 4.6 billion years old. The July 10 study in Astronomy & Astrophysics found 3I/ATLAS took about 800 million years to travel across part of the Milky Way to reach our solar system.

Breakthrough in hunt for ALIENS as scientists find treasure trove of ‘ingredients for life' near distant baby star
Breakthrough in hunt for ALIENS as scientists find treasure trove of ‘ingredients for life' near distant baby star

The Sun

time12 hours ago

  • The Sun

Breakthrough in hunt for ALIENS as scientists find treasure trove of ‘ingredients for life' near distant baby star

THE key ingredients for life may be scattered across the universe in more places than first thought, according to a new study. From prebiotic molecules in comets, to chemicals floating in the dust of interstellar space, scientists have traced the building blocks of life all across space. 1 Astronomers have recently discovered the key components to life swirling around a remote baby star roughly 1,300 light-years from Earth. A protostar called V883 Orionis, tucked away in the constellation Orion, contains 17 complex organic molecules, including ethylene glycol and glycolonitrile. These are the precursors to components found in DNA and RNA - which build all living things. The study, published in the The Astrophysical Journal Letters, suggests the key components for life are far more common throughout the universe - offering a glimpse of hope for Earth's alien hunters. While similar compounds have been discovered elsewhere in the cosmos, astronomers assumed it wouldn't be possible so close to a star. The birth of stars is violent, emitting such a huge amount of energy that astronomers assumed these seeds of life would be obliterated. It was thought that only the rare planetary systems - like Earth - would be capable of reproducing them. "Now it appears the opposite is true," study co-author Kamber Schwarz, an astrochemist at the Max Planck Institute for Astronomy in Heidelberg, Germany, said in a statement. "Our results suggest that protoplanetary discs inherit complex molecules from earlier stages, and the formation of complex molecules can continue during the protoplanetary disc stage." Using the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) in northern Chile, scientists spotted emission lines from a cluster of organic molecules inside a debris and gas rich disk encircling V883 Orionis. This is in spite of the baby star pumping out powerful bursts of radiation. "These outbursts are strong enough to heat the surrounding disc as far as otherwise icy environments, releasing the chemicals we have detected," study first author Abubakar Fadul, a graduate student at the Max Planck Institute for Astronomy, added. The organic compounds form on specks of ice in the debris and gas disk. Instead of destroying these precious organic compounds, the star may actually be freeing them from these icy surfaces. The researchers still need more data to see how well these compounds hold up as their host star grows. "Perhaps we also need to look at other regions of the electromagnetic spectrum to find even more evolved molecules," Fadul said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store