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asdff 9 hours ago

>Solar energy cannot be used for the appearance of life. Capturing light requires very complex structures that can be developed only after a very long evolution and which cannot form spontaneously in the absence of already existing living beings.

I think that is putting the cart well before the horse. Earliest "life" I would say looks something like a short sequence of random RNA, in some structure (as in secondary), in some solution, among some nucleotides, where brownian motion lead to collision with nucleotides in the chain that grow the chain and/or template off the chain and make a copy. The energy requirements for this sort of pre cell life are far less than cell based life which has to spend energy on cell membrane or wall building. Energy could be quite low, it would just reduce the number of interactions over time. Likely also that this pre cell "life" would not die either so long as it is protected somewhat by cosmic radiation bombarding the chain (although to an extent this is also a ripe source of mutagenic potential).

adrian_b 5 hours ago | parent [-]

Not true.

What you describe is a perpetuum mobile.

No kind of life can exist without a continuous flux of energy. The formation of any organic polymers requires energy, it cannot happen spontaneously.

Nucleotides that collide do not form polymers in water. The polymerization of nucleotides and of amino-acids and of most other organic macromolecules is done by water extraction (a.k.a. polycondensation).

Water extraction inside water requires considerable energy (i.e. you must dry some thing while it is still submerged in water). This is provided by certain dehydrated molecules, like ATP, from which water must have been extracted as a result of capturing some energy from the environment.

The common ancestor of all living beings known on Earth obtained energy by the reaction between free hydrogen (dihydrogen) and either carbon monoxide or carbon dioxide. It is likely that the capability to use carbon dioxide has appeared later and the very first living beings were powered by the conversion of dihydrogen and carbon monoxide into acetic acid. The energy from this reaction was captured because the first result of the reaction was not free acetic acid, but acetic acid condensed with another molecule, like in the acetyl-CoA that is used today by all living beings. Than that condensed molecule could be used to extract water from other molecules, producing dehydrated molecules like ATP, which can be used for the polymerization of nucleic acids.

There is no way to circumvent the need for a continuous source of energy for the appearance of life. Besides the H2 and CO gases, there was an alternative source of energy that was used very early, but it is not known if it was already needed for the initial appearance of life or it began to be harvested at a later stage. This second source of energy is the difference in ionic concentration between the acidic water of the primitive ocean and the alkaline water that is produced by dissolving volcanic rocks in places like hydrothermal vents, where H2 and other gases are also produced. The ionic concentration gradients produce ionic currents, which can power certain chemical reactions, like they also do in all present living beings.