Clara SousaSilva The fingerprints of life beyond Earth TED
It’s my job to find aliens,
so as you might guess,
I spent a lot of time thinking about them,
imagining little green women
meeting up with their friends,
commuting to work.
And that gets me thinking
about alien astronomers
trying to find us in their night sky.
If these alien astronomers
had looked in our direction
in the last century,
they would have been really excited
to detect unequivocal signs of technology.
But what if they looked
ten thousand years ago,
before we showed signs of civilization?
Would they shrug in disappointment
and go look elsewhere for life?
No, and neither should we.
Instead, we can look
for other signs of life.
For example, if those alien astronomers
had looked our way 10,000 years ago,
they might notice that even
without signs of civilization,
we still looked slightly unusual.
For one, we have
a thick and temperate atmosphere,
but more notably,
we have suspiciously large amounts
of oxygen in the atmosphere.
This would be a really encouraging
sign of life for my alien colleagues
because the composition
of the Earth’s atmosphere
can only sustain itself
through a biological cycle.
So can we do the same to them?
I’m certainly trying.
I am a quantum astrochemist,
which means I study
the quantum interactions
between molecules and light in space.
We can’t see these molecules
or even the planets they’re on.
But when life from a star
goes through an alien atmosphere,
each molecule within it
leaves a unique fingerprint
in the starlight that I can see from here.
And I look for the fingerprints
of molecules that could
be associated with life,
or biosignatures,
like complex pollutants or oxygen.
In the context of Earth,
oxygen is a wonderful biosignature,
but oxygen is not that hard to make.
So, for example, if our sun
had different levels of radiation
or if our oceans were evaporating
from a runaway greenhouse effect,
then large amounts of oxygen
could accumulate in our atmosphere
without biology,
and then oxygen would be
a false positive for life.
So maybe oxygen won’t be the solution
to finding life beyond Earth,
but then what is?
Well, my specialty
is to look for unusual molecules
that have fewer false positives for life
because they’re so difficult to make
that they’re rarely made spontaneously.
And my favorite of those
unusual molecules is phosphine.
When I first started working on phosphine
about a decade ago,
people had a hard time
thinking of it as a biosignature at all.
Instead, it was known
for being this horrific,
foul-smelling molecule
that messes with life’s
ability to use oxygen,
making it a really effective killer.
Because of this fatal interaction
with oxygen metabolism,
phosphine is used widely as a pesticide
and sadly for the same reason it was used
many times in chemical warfare.
Phosphine can be made in the lab,
and it’s also produced
in the extreme environments
found inside gas giants
like Jupiter and Saturn.
But on rocky planets like the Earth,
it is rarely created accidentally.
So we don’t really expect
to find phosphine on Earth at all.
And yet we do.
We find it in small amounts
throughout the globe,
and in some places
in strangely large quantities,
places like swamps
and rice fields and lake beds
and the excrements and guts
of most animals.
And what all of these
ecosystems have in common
is that they all host organisms
that are not reliant on oxygen,
so phosphine can’t hurt them.
Indeed, phosphine seems to be safely
and enthusiastically produced
in all of these oxygen-poor ecosystems.
So I figured, maybe other planets
with life less reliant on oxygen than ours
could also have phosphine,
but as a really popular biosignature.
And here’s the best thing about phosphine.
Because it’s so hard to make
on rocky planets like the Earth,
it has almost no false positives for life.
So I started considering
what telescopes we would need
to detect phosphine on planets
in our galactic neighborhood.
Because if we did,
I predicted it could only mean life.
I was imagining a distant planet,
a oxygen-poor tropical paradise
with a phosphine-rich biosphere
that we might one day be able to detect.
But turns out phosphine
was a little more exciting
than I had initially envisaged
because a few months
after I finished this work
an astronomer, Jane Greaves,
reached out to me
asking for help with interpreting
a telescope signal seen here in white.
Then months later,
another signal, seen here in orange,
that seemed to indicate that phosphine
might be present not on a distant planet,
but right next door,
on the clouds of Venus.
So did we do it?
Did we find life beyond Earth?
We don’t know.
These Venus observations
were noisy and preliminary,
so we still need to confirm,
without a doubt,
that the signal is real,
and if it is, we need to make sure
it’s not another molecule
mimicking phosphine’s fingerprint.
And if it is unambiguously phosphine,
we still need to figure out
what or who is making it,
because maybe it’s true
that life is the best explanation
for the presence of phosphine
on a planet like Venus.
But maybe that’s wrong
and there’s an exotic but not biological
way of making phosphine
that no one has thought of yet.
Either way, as much as I love phosphine,
I don’t think that’s how we’ll find life.
The detection of life will likely
not come from a single molecule.
No matter how special it is.
We’ll have to detect a whole biosphere
producing a complex network of gases
that together form a message
that reads: “We’re alive!”
As the Venus story shows,
the detection of life
will likely be uncertain,
but Venus is the perfect lab for us
to test our theories of biospheres
and how to interpret them.
If we learn to understand
the atmosphere of Venus
and the message it contains,
then we can find out if we got it right
by going there and checking.
And we’ll do that
at the end of the decade.
But this will not be the last time
that we have the discovery
of a biosignature
on a potentially habitable planet,
and next time we won’t be able
to just go there and check.
So my biggest concern
is not that we will fail to find
a habitable planet in our lifetimes.
My biggest concern is that we’ll point
our very expensive telescopes
directly at an inhabited planet
and just not know we did it.
But I am determined to not miss life.
So, yes, I will look for the unambiguous
but quite unlikely signs of technology
like complex pollutants.
And I’ll look for
the pleasant and familiar
but potentially misleading
signs of life, like oxygen.
And of course, I’ll keep looking
for the strange and scary
biosignatures like phosphine.
But crucially, I will look
for all the molecules
that can together paint
a holistic picture of a biosphere.
All of this so that one day
we’ll know life when we see it.
Thank you.