https://www.airspacemag.com/daily-planet...180975083/
INTRO: In a new paper published in the journal Life, Janusz Petkowski and co-authors from the Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences at MIT tackle a subject familiar to many science-fiction aficionados: Could there be life based on silicon rather than carbon? Who could forget the memorable Horta from the famous Star Trek episode “The Devil in the Dark” or the silicon life forms in Isaac Asimov’s short story “The Talking Stone”?
The authors have put together a very elaborate and detailed treatise on the topic—a must-read if you’re interested in ideas about extreme life. Not only do they provide a comparison of the chemical reactivity of carbon and silicon, they offer many amazing examples of how silicon is used by life on Earth and what type of silicon compounds exist in our own environment.
So what’s their verdict about whether Hortas or other silicon-based beings are possible? To make a long story short: It does not look very good. There aren’t many organic silicon compounds to begin with, and silicon-based life in water, or on an oxygen-rich planet, would be all but impossible as any free silicon would react quickly and furiously to form silicate rock. And that’s pretty much the end of the story. That is, if you’re only talking about Earth-like planets... (MORE)
INTRO: In a new paper published in the journal Life, Janusz Petkowski and co-authors from the Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences at MIT tackle a subject familiar to many science-fiction aficionados: Could there be life based on silicon rather than carbon? Who could forget the memorable Horta from the famous Star Trek episode “The Devil in the Dark” or the silicon life forms in Isaac Asimov’s short story “The Talking Stone”?
The authors have put together a very elaborate and detailed treatise on the topic—a must-read if you’re interested in ideas about extreme life. Not only do they provide a comparison of the chemical reactivity of carbon and silicon, they offer many amazing examples of how silicon is used by life on Earth and what type of silicon compounds exist in our own environment.
So what’s their verdict about whether Hortas or other silicon-based beings are possible? To make a long story short: It does not look very good. There aren’t many organic silicon compounds to begin with, and silicon-based life in water, or on an oxygen-rich planet, would be all but impossible as any free silicon would react quickly and furiously to form silicate rock. And that’s pretty much the end of the story. That is, if you’re only talking about Earth-like planets... (MORE)