Planet Formation and Panspermia: New Prospects for the Movement of Life through Space

Branislav Vukotić, Richard Gordon, Joseph Seckbach

Research output: Book/ReportBookpeer-review

2 Scopus citations

Abstract

Panspermia is the concept that life can be passively transported through space on various bodies and seed, habitable planets and moons, which we are beginning to learn may exist in large numbers. It is an old idea, but not popular with those who prefer that life on Earth started on Earth, an alternative, also unproven hypothesis. This book updates the concept of panspermia in the light of new evidence on planet formation, molecular clouds, solar system motions, supernovae ejection mechanisms, etc. Thus, it is to be a book about newly understood prospects for the movement of life through space. The novel approach presented in this book gives new insights into the panspermia theory and its connection with planetary formation and the evolution of galaxies. This offers a good starting point for future research proposals about exolife and a better perspective for empirical scrutiny of panspermia theory. Also, the key to understanding life in the universe is to understand that the planetary formation process is convolved with the evolution of stellar systems in their galactic environment. The book provides the synthesis of all these elements and give the readers an up-to-date insight on how panspermia might fit into the big picture.

Original languageEnglish
Publisherwiley
Number of pages332
ISBN (Electronic)9781119640912
ISBN (Print)9781119640394
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Jan 2021

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