Is there extraterrestrial life? No answer to this eternally fascinating question 
  currently exists, but astronomers have gathered a significant amount of relevant 
  information. Bruce Jakosky argues that we have every reason to believe that 
  there could be life elsewhere in the universe. Reviewing the development of 
  life on Earth, he considers the likelihood of comparable processes having taken 
  place on Mars and Venus, on moons around Jupiter and Saturn, and on planets 
  orbiting other distant stars. 
 The argument suggesting that there is life on other planets is very simple 
  and straightforward. It begins with life on Earth as that is, of course, the 
  only life that we know about. The fossil record and the genetic record tell 
  us that life on Earth is very old, having originated somewhere before 3.5 billion 
  years ago (b.y.a.) and possibly before 3.85 b.y.a. The oldest known life forms 
  were at once both very simple and remarkably complex. The simple aspect is that 
  they consisted of microscopic single-celled bacteria and archaea. These were 
  much less complex than the macroscopic life forms that exist today and that 
  have existed for around a billion years.  k7r23rv
  Even the oldest life forms that we can find in the fossil record, however, dating 
  back to 3.5 b.y.a., are very complex--they are very sophisticated organisms 
  that relied on DNA and RNA to transfer genetic information, on ATP to store 
  energy in a usable and accessible form, and, for some of them, on photosynthesis 
  to get access to energy. These organisms are much more complicated than we imagine 
  the first life forms would have been. 
  Life did not exist, however, for one-half to one billion years following the 
  formation of the Earth. The earliest half-billion years on the Earth were marked 
  by the continued influx of impacting objects left over from the formation of 
  the planets. Even today, these objects are capable of dramatically affecting 
  the terrestrial environment when they collide with the Earth. Back then, when 
  larger objects were present, they were capable of sterilizing the Earth completely. 
  There were an estimated five or so impacts subsequent to about 4.5 b.y.a. that 
  were capable of completely sterilizing the Earth's surface. 
  The early environment on the Earth, therefore, was not conducive to the continuing 
  existence of life, and the earliest life may not have been able to grab a foothold 
  until sometime after around 4.2 or 4.0 b.y.a. Thus, life may have taken as little 
  as a hundred million years, and no more than about a half-billion years, to 
  form once the environment became sufficiently clement to allow it. 
  The rapidity with which life originated on the Earth has important implications 
  for the process of forming life. It tells us that the formation of life is not 
  a difficult event, but, rather, it is a relatively straightforward consequence 
  of natural events on the planet. This is consistent with our current view that 
  life originated through chemical and geochemical processes, starting with organic 
  molecules in a wet surface or near-surface environment and using energy from 
  some chemical source to build them into more complicated molecules. Even though 
  we do not yet understand the specific processes that led to the origin of life, 
  we can easily see that simple chemical processes can lead to more complicated 
  molecules and, eventually, to life. 
  The ingredients for life 
  On Earth, we imagine that life really needed only a few key ingredients to get 
  started. Liquid water is one such substance. It is difficult for us to imagine 
  that life could exist without liquid water. Even with this requirement, we still 
  see that life could be widespread throughout the universe; if we allow for the 
  possibility that a different liquid also could hold the key to life, then life 
  could be even more widely distributed. 
  The second ingredient is access to the necessary biogenic elements, such as 
  C, H, O, N, and so on. This is not a very limiting factor, though, since we 
  expect these elements to be very widespread throughout the universe, to be incorporated 
  into planets during their formation, and to be readily available at the surfaces 
  of geologically active planets. 
  A source of organic molecules was required for the origin of life on Earth, 
  and presumably would be required for life elsewhere as well. On Earth, organics 
  could have come from one or more of several different sources. These include 
  the Earth's atmosphere, where they could form from energetic processes such 
  as lightning in a slightly reducing atmosphere (the so-called Urey-Miller process); 
  hydrothermal vents at the bottoms of the early oceans, heated by the extremely 
  active volcanism that would have been present then, where organics could form 
  by a chemical slide toward equilibrium as very hot water cools off once injected 
  into the oceans; or from organic molecules that were present in dust and planetesimals 
  accreting onto the Earth. Most likely, all of these sources contributed to the 
  prebiotic supply of organic molecules. 
  Finally, a source of energy is needed to power life. The energy causes the molecules 
  in the environment to react, moving them out of their natural state of chemical 
  equilibrium. As they move back toward equilibrium, they can release chemical 
  energy to power other chemical reactions, thereby providing usable energy for 
  biota. 
  Again, there are several possible sources of energy, including sunlight (especially 
  the energetic ultraviolet light that could have penetrated all the way to the 
  Earth's surface in the early periods before there was significant ozone), lightning 
  in the atmosphere, or geochemical energy obtained from geothermal heat in water 
  circulating through hydrothermal vents. All of these energy sources were available, 
  probably in abundance. There is no need for the energy sources that drove the 
  earliest life to be the same as those that power life today; thus, the complicated 
  chemical mechanisms that drive photosynthesis did not have to be present in 
  the original life. 
  We expect that, under these conditions, the formation of life was relatively 
  straightforward. We also expect that life could originate and continue to exist 
  any place where similar environmental conditions are met. This could mean elsewhere 
  in our solar system, or on planets around other stars. A search for life, therefore, 
  is almost tantamount to a search for the basic environmental conditions in which 
  life could exist. 
  Life on Mars 
  Elsewhere in our own solar system, we immediately think of Mars as a possible 
  abode for life. There is abundant geologic evidence on the martian surface to 
  indicate that liquid water has played an important role in shaping the surface 
  throughout time. The evidence suggests that water was relatively stable at the 
  martian surface during the first half-billion years recorded in its geology 
  (from about 4.0 to 3.5 b.y.a.). If correct, this might suggest that life could 
  have originated on Mars' surface at that time. 
  Subsequent to 3.5 b.y.a., however, there also is abundant geological evidence 
  for the continued presence of water. At this later time, the water was not stable 
  as a liquid at the surface, except perhaps intermittently. Rather, water was 
  present deep within the crust and was released to the surface in catastrophic 
  floods only occasionally. Within the crust, however, the water would have been 
  available to support either an origin of life or its continued existence if 
  it had originated earlier. In addition, within the crust there was an abundant 
  source of energy from the volcanic activity that has persisted throughout most 
  or all of martian history, and from chemical weathering of the minerals comprising 
  the crust. 
  Life could have originated at the surface on early Mars or in the deep subsurface 
  at any time, and life could exist today. If life is present today, it likely 
  would be either deep beneath the surface where water could exist as a liquid 
  (several kilometers deep, perhaps) or exposed at the surface in any transient 
  vents where hot, volcanically heated water is released at the surface. 
  Although there is some evidence to suggest that there might be fossils from 
  organisms within meteorites from Mars, this evidence is very controversial and 
  is not yet generally accepted. Significantly, even if this meteoritic evidence 
  is wrong, the basic argument regarding the possibility of life on Mars will 
  not change. This is true even though the meteorite findings appear to have reinvigorated 
  the interest in searching for life on Mars. 
  After Mars, other suggestions for an abode for life become more speculative. 
  Life could have arisen on early Venus, when the Sun was dimmer, temperatures 
  were lower, and the planet might not yet have undergone a transition to the 
  present thick, hot, greenhouse atmosphere. Of course, any evidence of an early 
  Venusian biosphere would have been long since obliterated. 
  The moons of Jupiter and Saturn 
  Life also could exist on Europa, a satellite of Jupiter, living in a possible 
  ocean of water that may lie buried beneath the surface covering of water-ice. 
  There, melting of the ice would result from tidal heating generated by Jupiter 
  tides, triggered by gravitational interactions with Io as they both orbit around 
  Jupiter. If there were an ocean, tidal heating and decay of radioactive elements 
  would provide a substantial source of geothermal energy that might be tapped 
  by living organisms. 
  Although there are exciting images from the Galileo spacecraft that suggest 
  that liquid water has been present beneath the surface of Europa, there is no 
  certain evidence for the existence of an ocean. Life conceivably could exist 
  on Io, as well; there, abundant energy is available through the tidal heating, 
  although there is no evidence for water of any sort. 
  Life also might have existed on Titan, a satellite of Saturn. This is much more 
  speculative, because temperatures today are much too low to allow plausible 
  life forms to exist. There might have been liquid water early in Titan's history, 
  however, with the heat to melt the abundant water-ice being provided by large 
  impacts during the end of the satellite's formation. Even without active biology 
  Titan represents an interesting exobiological laboratory, where organic chemical 
  processes occur even today in a manner similar to what might have occurred on 
  the early, prebiotic Earth. 
  Life beyond the solar system 
  As we move outside of our own solar system, the prospects for finding environments 
  suitable for life become still more speculative. As of today, we do not know 
  of a single planet around another star that provides an appropriate habitat 
  for life. However, this does not mean that we have no information on the subject. 
  
  A theory of how planetary systems form as a natural byproduct of the formation 
  of stars has been developed. This theory is based strongly on the conditions 
  that we see in our own solar system. However, it also is based on astronomical 
  observations of star-forming regions in the galaxy, interstellar clouds of gas 
  and dust, actual disks of gas and dust that occur around young stars, and, now, 
  direct detections of giant planets and brown dwarfs around other stars. As a 
  result, there is strong reason to believe that this theory might be more general 
  than if it were based only on our own solar system. 
  Planets are thought to form from the collapsing gas and dust that eventually 
  become a star. As the cloud collapses due to the pull of its own gravity, it 
  will begin to spin faster due to the conservation of angular momentum. Because 
  it is spinning, not all of the material can collect into a single central ball 
  that becomes the star. Some of the matter will stay behind as a disk around 
  the protostar; this disk consists of dust grains and gas, in orbit around the 
  newly formed star. 
  The dust will begin to accumulate into larger objects, first by sticking together 
  due to electrostatic forces, and later by gravitationally attracting other nearby 
  objects. Eventually, these planetesimals become large enough to accumulate into 
  a small number of individual protoplanets, each of planet-sized proportions. 
  Only the rocky material can accumulate at the relatively high temperatures that 
  occur close in to the star. Farther out, where temperatures are cooler both 
  from the lesser compression of the protoplanetary disk and from the greater 
  distance from the central star, water-ice also will condense and accumulate. 
  The greater mass available due to the presence of water-ice allows more massive 
  planetary cores to accumulate. These then can begin to attract the gas that 
  also resides in the disk. The gas accumulation then allows giant planets, similar 
  to our own Jupiter and Saturn, to form. These processes are thought to be relatively 
  general, allowing the formation of planetary systems that might look much like 
  ours. Numerical simulations of the formation of rocky planets suggest that our 
  inner solar system might be typical, consisting of a small number of planets 
  in well-spaced orbits. If so, this suggests that habitable planets might be 
  relatively common--there will be a significant likelihood of finding a planet 
  at just the right distance to allow liquid water to exist. Moreover, a relatively 
  wide range of distances from the central star would allow this. In our own solar 
  system, the habitable zone might extend from almost as close in to the Sun as 
  Venus to almost as far away from the Sun as Mars. There is at least one habitable 
  planet in our own solar system, and possibly as many as three or four more that 
  might have been habitable at one time or might still be habitable today. Planets 
  beyond the solar system Significantly, we are now able to detect planets that 
  are orbiting other stars, and we are finding that they are relatively abundant. 
  For the most part, we cannot yet detect Earth-sized planets, only gas-giants. 
  It is hard to estimate what fraction of stars might have planets. While as many 
  as half of the young stars have protoplanetary disks that may lead to planets, 
  less than 10 percent of the more mature stars that have been examined seem to 
  have gas-giant planets. Unfortunately, the statistics for Earth-like planets 
  are not known and cannot be determined from the available information; even 
  for gas-giants, such a small number of stars have been examined that the statistics 
  may not be reliable yet. The planets that we are detecting are providing new 
  information on how planetary systems evolve. For example, gas-giant planets 
  have been discovered that are much closer in to their star than was expected. 
  These almost certainly would have to have migrated in toward the star from farther 
  out, a process that would have devastating results for any terrestrial planets. 
  Given that planets do exist, however, we imagine that there must be abundant 
  rocky planets, and that many of these will be within their star's habitable 
  zone. This means that liquid water probably will be abundant on planets in our 
  galaxy. If life really is able to form as easily as we think it can, under the 
  proper conditions, then it is likely that life is rampant throughout the galaxy. 
  Of course, life is much more likely to take the form of bacteria-like organisms 
  than of larger, more complex organisms. While we expect that evolution will 
  occur on other planets, and that more complicated forms of life could exist, 
  it seems most likely that life on other planets will be like the simplest life 
  forms on Earth--those that have existed for the longest time and in the most 
  varied environments, and those that may be the most abundant forms of life on 
  Earth--bacteria. Does this mean that intelligent life does not exist elsewhere 
  in the galaxy? It is hard to say. On the one hand, some scientists suggest that 
  increased intelligence offers such a tremendous benefit to an organism that 
  it must be a highly likely outcome of evolution on any planet, given sufficient 
  time. On the other hand, intelligent life on Earth is the outcome of a random 
  series of evolutionary processes, and there appears to be no natural imperative 
  either toward more complex organisms or toward more intelligent organisms. So 
  it may be that intelligence is a rare phenomenon. Whether we are speaking of 
  bacterial life or intelligent life, however, we have insufficient evidence today 
  to know for certain whether extraterrestrial life exists. Although the present 
  discussion is based on solid observations of life on Earth and the nature of 
  the universe, the application to the question of life elsewhere so far is purely 
  theoretical. It is only through the continued exploration of our home planet, 
  our solar system, and our universe that we can hope to find fundamental solutions 
  to the questions surrounding the existence of life.