Title of article
Survivability of biomolecules during extraterrestrial delivery: New results on pyrolysis of amino acids and poly-amino acids Original Research Article
Author/Authors
V.A. Basiuk، نويسنده , , J. Douda، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2001
Pages
6
From page
231
To page
236
Abstract
The hypothesis on exogenous origin of organic matter on the early Earth is strongly supported by the detection of a large variety of organic compounds (including amino acids and nucleobases) in carbonaceous chondrites. Whether such complex species can be successively delivered by other space bodies (comets, asteroids and interplanetary dust particles) is unclear and depends primarily on capability of the biomolecules to survive high temperatures during atmospheric deceleration and impacts to the terrestrial surface. Recent simulation experiments on amino acid and nucleic acid base pyrolysis under oxygen-free atmosphere demonstrated that simple representatives of these (considered thermally unstable) compounds can survive at 1–10% level a rapid heating at 500–600 °C. In the present work, we report on new data on the pyrolysis of amino acids and their homopolymers and discuss implications of their thermal behavior for extraterrestrial delivery.
Journal title
Advances in Space Research
Serial Year
2001
Journal title
Advances in Space Research
Record number
1127299
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