Alien life may thrive on purple planets, new study of extreme bacteria suggests

On many exoplanets, the best clue that life is present may be a purple hue. New research into some of Earth’s most extreme bacteria explains why.

High-energy gamma-rays glow purple in this NASA image of a distant galaxy. Looking for purple-hued exoplanets may help scientists find signs of extreme alien life, new research suggests.

To find life on far-off planets, astronomers may need to look for pinpoints of purple.

New research unravels the light signals that are likely to come from worlds where oxygen and sunlight are in short supply — which is likely the case for many exoplanets discovered so far.

On Earth, the dominant color signal for life is green, thanks to bacteria and plants that use green chlorophyll to transform visible sunlight into energy. On a planet orbiting a smaller, dimmer star, however, organisms are more likely to thrive if they can run their metabolism on invisible infrared light.

Infrared-powered bacteria exist in many niches on Earth, especially in places where sunlight doesn’t penetrate, like murky marshes or deep-sea hydrothermal vents. In a new study published April 16 in the journal Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Lígia Fonseca Coelho, an astrobiologist at Cornell University, and her co-authors grew a sample of these bacteria, measured the wavelengths of light they reflected, and simulated what those light signatures would look like on various far-flung worlds.

Related: Little Green Men? Nope, Extraterrestrial Life May Look More Like Pasta.

Telescopes such as the Extremely Large Telescope, which is under construction in Chile, and the Habitable Worlds Observatory, which is still in the planning stages, will be able to search for these light spectra, the study researchers said.

“We need to create a database for signs of life to make sure our telescopes don’t miss life if it happens not to look exactly like what we encounter around us every day,” co-author Lisa Kaltenegger, a Cornell University astronomer and director of the Carl Sagan Institute, said in a statement.

window.sliceComponents = window.sliceComponents || {};

externalsScriptLoaded.then(() => {
window.reliablePageLoad.then(() => {
var componentContainer = document.querySelector(“#slice-container-newsletterForm-articleInbodyContent-aWgwdXUuv3RACCkvVR4KBo”);

if (componentContainer) {
var data = {“layout”:”inbodyContent”,”header”:”Sign up for the Live Science daily newsletter now”,”tagline”:”Get the worldu2019s most fascinating discoveries delivered straight to your inbox.”,”formFooterText”:”By submitting your information you agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy and are aged 16 or over.”,”successMessage”:{“body”:”Thank you for signing up. You will receive a confirmation email shortly.”},”failureMessage”:”There was a problem. Please refresh the page and try again.”,”method”:”POST”,”inputs”:[{“type”:”hidden”,”name”:”NAME”},{“type”:”email”,”name”:”MAIL”,”placeholder”:”Your Email Address”,”required”:true},{“type”:”hidden”,”name”:”NEWSLETTER_CODE”,”value”:”XLS-D”},{“type”:”hidden”,”name”:”LANG”,”value”:”EN”},{“type”:”hidden”,”name”:”SOURCE”,”value”:”60″},{“type”:”hidden”,”name”:”COUNTRY”},{“type”:”checkbox”,”name”:”CONTACT_OTHER_BRANDS”,”label”:{“text”:”Contact me with news and offers from other Future brands”}},{“type”:”checkbox”,”name”:”CONTACT_PARTNERS”,”label”:{“text”:”Receive email from us on behalf of our trusted partners or sponsors”}},{“type”:”submit”,”value”:”Sign me up”,”required”:true}],”endpoint”:”https://newsletter-subscribe.futureplc.com/v2/submission/submit”,”analytics”:[{“analyticsType”:”widgetViewed”}],”ariaLabels”:{}};

var triggerHydrate = function() {
window.sliceComponents.newsletterForm.hydrate(data, componentContainer);
}

if (window.lazyObserveElement) {
window.lazyObserveElement(componentContainer, triggerHydrate);
} else {
triggerHydrate();
}
}
}).catch(err => console.log(‘Hydration Script has failed for newsletterForm-articleInbodyContent-aWgwdXUuv3RACCkvVR4KBo Slice’, err));
}).catch(err => console.log(‘Externals script failed to load’, err));

Purple is the new green

Purple bacteria belong to a phylum called Pseudomonadota, and they thrive in low-oxygen environments. Coelho and her colleagues grew 20 species of purple sulfur-producing bacteria and 20 species of purple non-sulfur-producing bacteria. They gleaned these species from a variety of environments, including preexisting lab colonies; the waters near Cape Cod, Massachusetts; and a pond on Cornell’s campus in upstate New York. These bacteria actually contain numerous colorful pigments beyond purple, including orange and red carotenoids.

After determining which wavelengths of light these bacteria reflected most strongly, the researchers simulated how those wavelengths would look coming from a variety of potential exoplanets: an Earth-like environment with 70% ocean and 30% land, a 100% ocean world, a 100% frozen world, and a snowball world with half dry land and half snow.

“Our models show that depending on the surface coverage of the biota and the cloud coverage, a wide variety of terrestrial planets could show signs of purple bacteria surface biopigments,” the researchers wrote in their paper. “While it is unknown whether life — or purple bacteria — can evolve on other worlds, purple might just be the new green in the search for surface life.”

READ MORE

Nanoscopic tool assesses alternative COVID-19 prevention

High-speed atomic force microscopy visualization of a spike-neutralizing antibody reacting with a spike protein. Credit: [...]

Unusual octopus sex session captured in rare and comical footage

Watch a female octopus drag a male around during sex in rare footage captured off [...]

“Nightmare Scenario”: Godfather Of AI Quits Google To Warn The World About The Dangers Of AI

This week, a man who is commonly referred to as the “Godfather” of artificial intelligence [...]

The Quest to Upload Your Mind Into the Digital Space

Human cortical neurons in the brain. David Scharf/Corbis In London, Benjamin Franklin once opened a [...]

What’s the correct way to lower your car?

Image Gallery: Custom Cars If you want to lower your truck, there are several different [...]

A powerful technique for tracking a protein’s fleeting shape changes

IFSopen and IFSclosed conformational substates and identification of a kinetically trapped state. Credit: Nature Structural [...]

This Wonder Bird Flies Thousands of Miles, Non-Stop, as Part of an Epic Migration

Bog walking is a treacherous business. The bog, or muskeg, near Beluga, Alaska, is a [...]