Poster's note : the biological consequences of CO2 storage do not seem to
have been addressed. This article may shed some light on the issue

http://m.space.com/27777-alien-life-supercritical-carbon-dioxide.html?cmpid=514648

Alien Life Could Thrive on 'Supercritical' CO2 Instead of Water

by Charles Q. Choi, Space.com Contributor

Date: 16 November 2014 Time: 09:50 AM ET

Scientists suspect that alien life could potentially thrive on an alien
planet by subsisting on "supercritical" carbon dioxide instead of water.

Alien life might flourish on an exotic kind of carbon dioxide, researchers
say. This "supercritical" carbon dioxide, which has features of both
liquids and gases, could be key to extraterrestrial organisms much as water
is to biology on Earth.Most familiar as a greenhouse gas that traps heat,
helping warm the planet, carbon dioxide is exhaled by animals and used by
plants in photosynthesis. While it can exist as a solid, liquid and gas,
past a critical point of combined temperature and pressure, carbon dioxide
can enter a"supercritical" state. Such a supercritical fluid has properties
of both liquids and gases. For example, it can dissolve materials like a
liquid, but flow like a gas.The critical point for carbon dioxide is about
88 degrees Fahrenheit (31 degrees Celsius) and about 73 times Earth's
atmospheric pressure at sea level. This is about equal in pressure to that
found nearly a half-mile (0.8 kilometers) under the ocean's surface.
Supercritical carbon dioxide is increasingly used in a variety of
applications, such as decaffeinating coffee beans and dry cleaning.

Strange possibility for life

Ordinarily, carbon dioxide is not considered a viable solvent to host the
chemical reactions for life, but the properties ofsupercritical fluids can
differ quite significantly from the regular versions of those fluids — for
instance, while regular water is not acid, supercritical water is acidic.
Given how substantially different supercritical carbon dioxide is from
regular carbon dioxide in terms of physical and chemical properties,
scientists explored whether it could be suitable for life."

I always have been interested in possibly exotic life and creative
adaptations of organisms to extreme environments," said study co-author
Dirk Schulze-Makuch, an astrobiologist at Washington StateUniversity in
Pullman. "Supercritical CO2 is often overlooked, so I felt that someone had
to put together something on its biological potential."The researchers
noted that enzymes can be more stable in supercritical carbon dioxide than
in water. In addition, supercritical carbon dioxide makes enzymes more
specific about the molecules they bind to, leading to fewer unnecessary
side reactions.

Surprisingly, a number of species of bacteria are tolerant of supercritical
carbon dioxide. Prior research found that several different microbial
species and their enzymes are active in the fluid.In addition, exotic
locales on Earth support the idea that life can survive in environmentsrich
in carbon dioxide. Previous studies showed that microbes can live near
pockets of liquid carbon dioxide trapped under Earth's oceans.This liquid
carbon dioxide in the seafloor gets denser with greater depth, as the
weight of the seas and rock above it increases. As that happens, the fluid
could become supercritical, and microbes might use at least some of the
biologically advantageous properties of this supercritical carbon dioxide
to survive, Schulze-Makuch said. Indeed, there may be many reservoirs of
supercritical carbon dioxide under the oceans, he added."It would be great
to drill into areas with supercritical carbon dioxide on Earth and
investigate those environments in detail, but this is obviously difficult
because of practical limitations and huge expenses," Schulze-Makuch said.

Was Venus a supercritical haven?

Since carbon dioxide is a very common molecule in planetary atmospheres,
the researchers suggest that supercritical carbon dioxide may be present on
many worlds. This is especially true for Venus, whose atmosphere is mostly
carbon dioxide.In its early history, Venus was located in the sun's
habitable zone, the area where liquid water can form on a planet's surface.
Life as it is currently known could have developed there before Venus
heated up enough to lose all its water. Although Schulze-Makuch said it was
unlikely that any such life could have switched from water to supercritical
carbon dioxide, perhaps some organic remnants of such life, if it existed,
could have been preserved in that fluid.Beyond the solar system,
Schulze-Makuch noted that many newfound planets orbiting distant stars are
so-called super-Earths, worlds up to 10 or more times the mass of Earth.
Under the stronger gravitational pulls and correspondingly higher
atmospheric pressures of those planets, supercritical carbon dioxide might
be common, he said.Although Schulze-Makuch noted there is no proof that
life that does not depend on water is possible, "there are good reasons to
hypothesize that this is so," he told Space.com.

Schulze-Makuch and his colleague Ned Budisa detailed their findings in
theSeptember issue of the journal Life.

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"geoengineering" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
Visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/geoengineering.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to