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Climbing the Ladder to Life Detection

In the past two decades, NASA spacecraft have identified potentially habitable environments throughout the solar system and beyond. Spacecraft on Mars have found evidence that lakes and streams once covered the planet, protected by a long-gone thick atmosphere. At Saturn’s moon Enceladus, the Cassini spacecraft sniffed plumes of water jetting out of Enceladus’s icy shell—detecting chemistry akin to that occurring in certain places on Earth’s seafloor, where seawater chemically reacts with rock (and where living creatures thrive). The upcoming Europa Clipper mission could do the same at Jupiter’s moon Europa, where scientists have spotted more plumes. Even beyond the solar system, some of the thousands of planets now known to orbit other stars may harbor surface oceans.

Illustration of Ladder of Life
On our quest to find life beyond Earth, scientists first must have to ask themselves: what signs would be the most compelling evidence?
M. Neveu/NASA Astrobiology Program/NASA/JPL-Caltech/UCLA

The next step in exploring these environments is to find out whether they’re actually habitable—and then search for life. Unfortunately, no simple life-detection instrument currently exists. Unless a camera captures a growing mat of bacteria on a Martian rock or alien plankton swimming under Enceladus’s ice, scientists must use a suite of instruments and diverse sets of data to look for biosigatures—or signs of life.

But what are those signs? To help answer this question, a team from NASA’s Astrobiology Program has developed the “Ladder of Life Detection,” a guide for researchers where each rung represents a key attribute of life. The Ladder was published in the journal Astrobiology on June 4, 2018.

The Ladder’s Biosignatures

“The Ladder of Life Detection lists 15 features that the astrobiology community proposed to represent indicators of life,” said Marc Neveu, a postdoctoral fellow at NASA Headquarters in Washington, DC and lead author of the paper. The Ladder also describes how scientists might measure these features and determine whether they really are evidence of life.

For instance, all life that we know of requires complex organic molecules and uses amino acids—two features in the Ladder.

But just finding these molecules doesn’t mean they arose from life. “Many of the molecules that are used by life can be formed without life,” said Mary Voytek, Senior Scientist for Astrobiology at NASA Headquarters and paper coauthor. For example, chemical reactions on a planet or comet can form amino acids and other organic molecules. 

Scientists have to “figure out, with those caveats, how you can say that what you’re looking at was produced by life,” Voytek said.

An indication would be target molecules found in unique proportions compared to expected levels in the surrounding environment. “The presence of something that’s not predicted in the environment is evidence of life,” Voytek said. “Life pushes things out of equilibrium.”

For instance, organic molecules of a certain complexity (think a Lego car versus individual bricks clicked together) could only have been made by life, Voytek continued. “Chemical complexity is a result of biology—it requires energy or enzymes to make it happen.”

Other biosignatures include pigments, indications of metabolism (e.g., waste heat or compounds breathed out by life), or even evidence of Darwinian evolution. The latter can’t currently be detected within the timescales of a space mission, but would be the golden ticket to identifying life.

Understanding the Environmental Context

Whether scientists can measure these biosignatures, either remotely or in place, is the next question, Voytek said. It’s not just about instrument performance or avoiding the contamination of samples with molecules brought from Earth. Scientists will also need to consider the environmental context. How fragile is the sample? Can our analysis destroy the sample? Does the environment chemically change the sample? Can life tolerate the conditions where the sample came from (like the radiation-exposed surface of Mars or the cold depths of an ocean under ice)?

The Ladder lists answers for each biosignature, based on experience gained by looking for life on Mars and in Earth’s oldest rocks and most extreme environments. As it turns out, easier measurements to make (the bottom rungs) might be harder to interpret than rungs further up the Ladder. Climbing the Ladder toward life will require challenging measurements.

Neveu stressed that the rungs on the Ladder aren’t set in stone—with more research and discussion, each step of the Ladder can be moved around, and more can be added. He and his coauthors encourage input from the astrobiology community to improve the Ladder.

To learn more about NASA’s astrobiology research, visit: https://astrobiology.nasa.gov/