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everywhere, on average. The same laws of physics apply throughout space, holding sway over the interactions of matter and energy. For these reasons the processes that ultimately led to life External Link: So, what IS life? A biochemist tackles is question informally. on Earth could reasonably lead to life External Link: So, what IS life? A biochemist tackles is question informally. anywhere else in the universe, provided that the conditions are suitable to support life External Link: So, what IS life? A biochemist tackles is question informally. as we know it.

So what makes life External Link: So, what IS life? A biochemist tackles is question informally. precious and rare, limited only to Earth at least as far as we can tell? One answer simply may be that we have not yet looked long enough for life External Link: So, what IS life? A biochemist tackles is question informally. elsewhere or in the right places. If that's the case, the question may seem as quaint a few decades from now as the old belief that all heavenly bodies revolved around Earth. However, the answer may also lie in just how improbable it is for life External Link: So, what IS life? A biochemist tackles is question informally. to have arisen. Even the simplest organisms are incredibly advanced machines. To function and grow, an organism must maintain orderly processes External Link: A discussion of within and around itself. Then, it reproduces and transfers External Link: life on Earth depends on chemicals such as DNA to reproduce and transfer information to offspring. Learn more. that ability to its offspring. Such a chain of events runs strongly against a powerful tendency for systems to become more disorderly with time.

We know that tendency as one manifestation of a powerful principle called the second law of thermodynamics External Link: A quantitative presentation of the second law of thermodynamics.. According to this law, the disorder of a system--a quantity known as "entropy External Link: One viewpoint on the relationship between entropy and life"--must increase with time if no energy enters or leaves the system. When entropy External Link: One viewpoint on the relationship between entropy and life increases, things fall apart and lose their structure. For instance, a sugar cube dropped into a glass of water slowly dissolves. Eventually all the sugar molecules drift evenly throughout the water. We never see the reverse: a sugar cube assembling from floating molecules to appear miraculously at the bottom of the glass. At first glance the genesis of a living cell from a stew of organic molecules seems an equally miraculous violation of the second law of thermodynamics External Link: A quantitative presentation of the second law of thermodynamics.. However, the system is not isolated; it absorbs energy from the Sun and its environment. Many millions of years of mixing Earth's primitive organic ingredients with such inputs of energy led to the first cells. Billions of years of further interactions created the diverse life External Link: So, what IS life? A biochemist tackles is question informally. we see around us today.


So what makes life External Link: So, what IS life? A biochemist tackles is question informally. precious and rare, limited only to Earth at least as far as we can tell? One answer simply may be that we have not yet looked long enough for life External Link: So, what IS life? A biochemist tackles is question informally. elsewhere or in the right places.


Still, when we consider life External Link: So, what IS life? A biochemist tackles is question informally. in terms of entropy External Link: One viewpoint on the relationship between entropy and life, it seems that the chances of creating a living biological machine just by following the laws of physics are ridiculously small. Yet life External Link: So, what IS life? A biochemist tackles is question informally. exists, so the probability is not zero. Does this mean life External Link: So, what IS life? A biochemist tackles is question informally. is plentiful? Will we someday make contact with other beings like ourselves? These questions often prompt spiritual responses, and understandably so. They cut to the core of our wonder about the universe and whether we are part of a grand cosmic design. Debating that metaphysical issue is easy; resolving it scientifically is impossible. However, we can and should use science in another way: to examine the sequence that matter and energy must follow to create a technological civilization out of formless interstellar gas. How plausible is each step along that path? The American astronomer Frank Drake External Link: A picture and brief biographical sketch of Frank Drake. posed that question mathematically in what is now known as the Drake equation Internal Link:  . His formula offers a way to estimate the number of civilizations in our Milky Way galaxy that have the technology needed to talk to one another. The equation is a string of numbers and fractions. Put into words, it reads something like this:

Start with the number of stars External Link: A very brief review of what a star is. that form in the galaxy each year. Multiply that rate by the fraction of stars External Link: A very brief review of what a star is. with planets External Link: Surprisingly, ''What is a planet?'' is still not a settled question.. Multiply by the number of planets External Link: Surprisingly, ''What is a planet?'' is still not a settled question. or moons External Link: A table of information about the known moons in our solar system. in each planetary system with conditions suitable for life External Link: So, what IS life? A biochemist tackles is question informally.. Multiply by the fraction of such planets External Link: Surprisingly, ''What is a planet?'' is still not a settled question. upon which life External Link: So, what IS life? A biochemist tackles is question informally. has evolved. Multiply by the fraction of life External Link: So, what IS life? A biochemist tackles is question informally.-bearing planets External Link: Surprisingly, ''What is a planet?'' is still not a settled question. with intelligent societies. Multiply by the fraction of those societies that have developed the technology to communicate across space. Finally, multiply by the average number of years that a technological civilization survives.

This long string of multiplications yields not a solid number but a range of numbers that depend on the assumptions you make at each step. Astronomers know some of the quantities fairly well, but they can only guess at others. For example, the galaxy gives birth to about 10 new stars External Link: A very brief review of what a star is. each year. The growing number of planet discoveries seems to show that many stars External Link: A very brief review of what a star is., if not most, have planets External Link: Surprisingly, ''What is a planet?'' is still not a settled question.. How frequently life External Link: So, what IS life? A biochemist tackles is question informally. arises on these planets External Link: Surprisingly, ''What is a planet?'' is still not a settled question. is much less clear. Biologists believe that life External Link: So, what IS life? A biochemist tackles is question informally. took hold on Earth within a few hundred million years of the planet's birth, soon after a steady bombardment by large comets and meteorites died down. We don't yet know which chemical reactions spawned the first living cells. But chemistry is, at its roots, a special kind of physics that applies to atoms and molecules interacting with their environment in large groups. If physics is uniform throughout the universe--and if the Copernican principle External Link: A longer explanation of what this principle means to science and knowledge. is indeed a fundamental tenet of the cosmos--the chemistry of life External Link: So, what IS life? A biochemist tackles is question informally. may bubble forth in more places than many of us suspect.

Even so, planets External Link: Surprisingly, ''What is a planet?'' is still not a settled question. experience a vast range of physical conditions. Which conditions are just right for life External Link: So, what IS life? A biochemist tackles is question informally. to arise? Here, we can draw lessons from the tale of Goldilocks External Link: A physics professor's musings on the so-called ''Goldilocks Effect.''. Her mischievous exploration of the bears' cabin led her to taste three bowls of porridge.