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Giant Cycones at Saturn's Poles Create a Swirl of Mystery 10/15/2008

New images yield clues to seasons of Uranus 10/15/2008

NASA Supercomputer Shows How Dust Rings Point to Exo-Earths 10/14/2008

Astronomers get best view yet of infant stars at feeding time 10/13/2008

Phoenix Lander Digs And Analyzes Soil As Darkness Gathers 10/13/2008

Venus Express searching for life - on Earth 10/12/2008

South Pole Telescope team uses new method to discover clusters of galaxies far, far away 10/12/2008

Cosmic eye sheds light on early galaxy formation 10/11/2008

Stars stop forming when big galaxies collide 10/11/2008

CoRoT discovery challenges the definition of extra-solar planets 10/10/2008

Born from the Wind - Unique Multi-wavelength Portrait of Star Birth 10/9/2008

NASA spacecraft ready to explore outer solar system 10/8/2008

Cassini flyby of Saturn moon offers insight into solar system history 10/8/2008

Researchers and students to develop small CubeSat satellites 10/7/2008

Meteorites From Inner Solar System Match Up To Earth's Platinum Standard 10/7/2008

Presence of Essential Molecule in Space Could Support Life on Other Planets (8/16/2007)

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life

Some of the elements necessary to support life on Earth are widely known - oxygen, carbon and water, to name a few. Just as important in the existence of life as any other component is the presence of adenine, an essential organic molecule. Without it, the basic building blocks of life would not come together. Scientists have been trying to find the origin of Earth's adenine and where else it might exist in the solar system. University of Missouri-Columbia researcher Rainer Glaser may have the answer.

Life exists on Earth because of a delicate combination of chemical ingredients. Using a theoretical model, Glaser is hypothesizing the existence of adenine in interstellar dust clouds. Those same clouds may have showered young Earth with adenine as it began cooling billions of years ago, and could potentially hold the key for initiating a similar process on another planet.

"The idea that certain molecules came from space is not outrageous," said Glaser, professor of chemistry in MU's College of Arts and Science. "You can find large molecules in meteorites, including adenine. We know that adenine can be made elsewhere in the solar system, so why should one consider it impossible to make the building blocks somewhere in interstellar dust?"

This theory describing the fusion of early life-forming chemicals is presented in the latest issue of the peer-reviewed journal "Astrobiology" and is co-authored by Brian Hodgen (Creighton University), Dean Farrelly (University of Manchester) and Elliot McKee (St. Louis University). The paper, "Adenine Synthesis in Interstellar Space: Mechanisms of Prebiotic Pyrimidine-Ring Formation of Monocyclic HCN-Pentamers," describes the absence of a sizeable barrier that would prevent formation of the skeleton needed for adenine synthesis. The article is also featured in the Aug. 6 issue of "Chemical & Engineering News."

Glaser believes astronomers should look for interstellar dust clouds that have highly-concentrated hydrogen cyanide (HCN), which can indicate the presence of adenine. Finding such pockets would narrow the spectrum of where life could exist within the Milky Way galaxy.

"There is a lot of sky with a few areas that have dust clouds. In those dust clouds, a few of them have HCN. A few of those have enough HCN to support the synthesis of the molecules of life. Now, we have to look for the HCN concentrations, and that's where you want to look for adenine," Glaser said. "Chemistry in space and `normal chemistry' can be very different because the concentrations and energy-exchange processes are different. These features make the study of chemistry in space very exciting and academically challenging; one really must think without prejudice."

Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued by the University of Missouri-Columbia

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