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Dec 2024
8m 30s

Bacteria Colonizes Asteroid Sample, Life...

Perplexity
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In today's episode of Discover Daily, we explore how Earth bacteria demonstrated remarkable adaptability by rapidly colonizing samples from the asteroid Ryugu, despite rigorous containment protocols. The Japanese Hayabusa2 spacecraft's samples, initially microbe-free, saw bacterial growth expand from 11 to 147 organisms within a week of Earth exposure, raising important questions about containment methods for future space missions and our understanding of microbial adaptation to extraterrestrial materials.

A NASA-funded study has challenged our understanding of life's molecular preferences, revealing that RNA shows no inherent bias toward left or right-handed amino acids. This discovery questions long-held assumptions about how life developed its distinctive molecular handedness and suggests that life's preference for left-handed molecules emerged through evolution rather than chemical predetermination, potentially broadening our criteria for detecting life beyond Earth.

Scientists have uncovered a fascinating mathematical pattern known as Zipf's Law that appears consistently across human languages, where the most frequent word occurs about twice as often as the second most common word, three times as often as the third, and so on. This pattern, which transcends cultural and linguistic boundaries, may reflect fundamental aspects of human cognition and could help develop more natural AI language processing systems, while raising intriguing questions about language evolution and brain function.

From Perplexity's Discover Feed:

https://www.perplexity.ai/page/bacteria-colonizes-asteroid-sa-6M8G2zu5QUqahhLVD2WwWQ

https://www.perplexity.ai/page/life-s-left-handed-mystery-MNDE1vGXTs.G1dgCgPDT6g

https://www.perplexity.ai/page/zipf-s-law-in-languages-aLTn8J_gRlO39uqMv9t2sA

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