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Did Life on Earth Begin With Lightning Strikes?

Did Life on Earth Begin With Lightning Strikes?
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Benjamin Hess , Yale University , Department Of Earth Planetary Sciences , Planetary Sciences , பெஞ்சமின் ஹெஸ் , யேல் பல்கலைக்கழகம் , துறை ஆஃப் பூமி கிரகங்கள் அறிவியல் , கிரகங்கள் அறிவியல் ,

Trillions of lightning bolts may have jumpstarted life on Earth


Trillions of lightning bolts may have jumpstarted life on Earth
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Researchers say in a new study that trillions of lightning strikes billions of years ago may have unlocked phosphorous on the Earth s surface, kickstarting life on the planet. File Photo by cephotoclub/Shutterstock
March 16 (UPI) Trillions and trillions of lightning strikes may have unlocked the phosphorous needed to spark life on Earth, according to a new study published Tuesday in the journal Nature Communications.
This work helps us understand how life may have formed on Earth and how it could still be forming on other, Earth-like planets, lead author Benjamin Hess, a graduate student at Yale University, said in a news release. ....

Benjamin Hess , Yale University , Nature Communications , பெஞ்சமின் ஹெஸ் , யேல் பல்கலைக்கழகம் , இயற்கை தகவல்தொடர்புகள் ,

Lightning strikes may have helped life emerge on Earth: study - Newspaper


A PIECE of fulgurite, a glassy rock created by lightning strike that hits the surface and causes melting and vaporisation. Reuters
WASHINGTON: The emergence of the Earth’s first living organisms billions of years ago may have been facilitated by a bolt out of the blue or perhaps a quintillion of them.
Researchers said on Tuesday that lightning strikes during the first billion years after the planet’s formation roughly 4.5 billion years ago may have freed up phosphorus required for the formation of biomolecules essential to life.
The study may offer insight into the origins of Earth’s earliest microbial life and potential extraterrestrial life on similar rocky planets. Phosphorus is a crucial part of the recipe for life. It makes up the phosphate backbone of DNA and RNA, hereditary material in living organisms, and represents an important component of cell membranes. ....

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