Potential for Extraterrestrial Life to Appear Purple

Purple Planets: Did Early Earth Have Life? Scientists propose new way to search for signs of life on exoplanets

In a recent study, scientists have proposed that early Earth may have been a purple planet. Purple archaea used the molecule retinal to photosynthesize before oxygen filled the atmosphere. The paper, authored by Shiladitya DesSarma at the University of Maryland, expands on potential life forms that could have existed on Earth in its early days.

Recent research has also added spectral data on 20 species of purple bacteria, collected from various environments like marshes and deep-sea hydrothermal vents. By measuring the wavelengths of light these bacteria reflect and modeling how these patterns may appear on a distant planet, scientists have created a collection of light signatures. This information is now part of an ongoing database that is publicly available for other researchers to use in their own projects.

Astronomers search for signs of life on other planets using biosignatures, such as the color of a planet’s surface. Reflected light spectroscopy is often used for this purpose, but current telescopes are limited in their capabilities. For example, the James Webb Space Telescope can only detect biosignatures in an exoplanet’s atmosphere and cannot measure reflected light from the planet’s surface. Edward Schwieterman at the University of California Riverside emphasizes this limitation.

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