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Galactic Baby Boom Influenced Life
on Earth
By Sara Goudarzi
The stellar baby boom period of the
Milky Way sparked a flowering and crashing of life here on Earth, a
new study suggests.
Some 2.4 billion years ago when the
Milky Way started upping its star production, cosmic
rays--high-speed atomic particles--started pouring onto our planet,
causing instability within the living. Populations of bacteria and
algae repeatedly soared and crashed in the oceans.
The researchers counted the amount
of carbon-13 within sedimentary rocks, the most common rocks exposed
on the Earth's surface. When algae and bacteria were growing in the
oceans, they took in carbon-12, so the ocean had an abundance of
carbon-13.
Many sea creatures use carbon-13 to
make their shells. If there is a lot of carbon-13 stored in rocks,
it means life, the origin of which is still unknown, was booming.
Therefore, variations in carbon-13 are a good indicator of the
productivity of life on Earth.
The researchers found that the
biggest fluctuation in productivity coincided with star formation,
which had an affect on Earth's climate and therefore on the
productivity of life on our planet.
According to one theory, when a
star explodes far away in the Milky Way, cosmic rays penetrate
through the Earth's atmosphere and produce ions and free electrons.
The released electrons act as catalysts and accelerate the formation
of small clusters of sulfuric acid and water molecules, the building
blocks of clouds. Therefore, cosmic rays increase cloud cover on
Earth, reflecting sunlight and keeping the planet relatively cool.
Although cold and icy times are
generally considered unfriendly to life, the data reveals that
biological productivity kept oscillating between very high and very
low. The reason, the researchers suggest, is that stronger winds
during icy epochs stirred the oceans and improved the supply of
nutrients in the surface waters.
"The odds are 10,000-to-1 against
this unexpected link between cosmic rays and the variable state of
the biosphere being just a coincidence, and it offers a new
perspective on the connection between the evolution of the Milky Way
and the entire history of life over the last 4 billion years," said
study author Henrik Svensmark of the Danish National Space Center.
The study was detailed in a recent
issue of the journal Astronomische Nachrichten. -- The
Associated Press
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