Estimated flux of rocks bearing viable lifeforms exchanged between Earth and Mars
(Transpermia)by Michael Paine, The Planetary Society Australian Volunteers, mpaineATtpgi.com.au
Astrobiology Workshop, Macquarie University, Australia July 2001
Introduction
A possible mechanism for transfer of life between planets is via rocks ejected by major asteroid or comet impacts. The term "transpermia" was coined by Oliver Morton to describe the transfer of lifeforms by this method and to distinguish it from the more general concept of panspermia. Davies (1998a-c) discusses several possibilities for transpermia including hypothetical Mars-life reaching Earth; Earth-life reaching Mars, the Earth's Moon and moons of the outer solar system and interstellar transfers via meteoroids. Melosh (1994) outlines the mechanisms by which such transfers can take place. Mileikowsky and others (2000) build on Melosh's work and provide estimates of transfer rates between Mars and Earth over the past 500 million years.
The transfer mechanism
The analysis by Mileikowsky considers the ejection of surface rocks from Mars during impacts by large asteroids, the proportion of ejected rocks that reach the escape velocity of the planet and go into orbit around the Sun and the proportion (they estimate about 5%) that eventually collide with Earth and reach its surface.
Mileikowsky's Table 2 provides calculations for one scenario. They select conditions that optimise the chances of lifeforms surviving the journey. These "hospitable" conditions are:
These criteria are likely to be very conservative and therefore serve to set a lower limit to the exchange of hospitable rocks between Mars and Earth.The radius of ejected rock is between 0.67 and 1 metre (mainly to provide protection from radiation in deep space). [note 1] The core temperature within the rock during ejection or re-entry did not exceed 100 C (two of the dozen or so Martian meteorites that have been found on Earth meet this criterion) The journey time between planets was 100,000 years or less Under this scenario the quantity of "hospitable" ejecta reaching the Earth from Mars averages out at 150 kg per year. This represents roughly 15% of the total estimated quantity of Martian material falling to Earth each year. [note 2]
There is a trap in considering average (annual) values because the transfer of rocks occurs in spikes. It is assumed that impacts by asteroids 1km in diameter or larger are needed to launch ejecta into interplanetary flight. Such impacts produce craters 20km or more in diameter. They occur on Mars and Earth (land impacts only) over typical timescales of one to ten million years.
By definition, viable transfers only take place within 100,000 years of the impact so there are long periods between impacts when Mars rocks that fall to Earth have remained in space for too long and any hitchhiking microbes are assumed to have died. There do not appear to have been large impacts on Mars (or the Earth for that matter) over the past 100,000 years so it is unlikely that "hospitable" Mars rocks are reaching the Earth at present, or vice versa. [Note 3]
Survival rates
Likely survival rates of any viable micro-organisms within the rocks are influenced by numerous hazards during the journey. Mileikowsky estimates that 7% of the micro-organisms will survive. This is based partly on a range of tests involving (Earthly) B.subtilis bacteria that included shooting specimens out of a cannon (Mastrapa 2000). Again, this may be conservative because there are likely to be tougher micro-organisms on Earth (Davies 1998b).
The long term average transfer rate of 150kg of hospitable rocks per year, with 7% of resident microbes surviving (if any were present in the rocks at the time of launch), is equivalent to a series of space missions that return samples of about 10 kg of Martian rocks each year under protected conditions that are favourable to the survival of any life within the rocks.
Of course there is no firm evidence of life on Mars at this stage so the above numbers are speculative. The same cannot be said for the reverse - transfer of Earth-life to Mars.
Earth-life reaching Mars
There are differences between Earth and Mars but the number of hospitable rocks reaching Mars from Earth is similar to that considered above. Therefore, based on Mileikowsky's conservative estimates, roughly 150 kg of hospitable Earth rocks reach Mars each year, on average, and some 7% of hitchhiking microbes can be expected to survive the journey.
Colonisation of present day Mars by these microbes appears to be formidable. The microbes would tend to be trapped in fragments of the original boulder scattered over the dry, cold surface of Mars. Under these conditions they would probably remain dormant after a freezing journey through space. Indeed some frozen, dormant Earth-life might be found by geologists when they eventually explore Mars and find Earth meteorites on its surface.
If any hitchhiking microbes were lucky enough to land in a warm moist spot on Mars then the chances of colonisation could be expected to be much higher. Conditions were probably more favourable to such colonisation on ancient Mars, when volcanoes were active and the planet was thought to be warmer and wetter.
Beyond Mars
Although the chances of "hospitable" rock transfers are substantially less, the same mechanisms may have delivered microbe-bearing Earth rocks to Jupiter's moon Europa (SETI Institute item). It is thought that Europa has a thick water ocean covered by a crust of ice. Therefore, if a life-bearing Earth rock reached the surface of Europa intact the impediments to colonisation might be less than those on present day Mars. A major difficulty, however, is the lack of an atmosphere on Europa. Collisions with the icy crust would usually take place at interplanetary speeds and the impacting rock could be expected to be vaporised in an impact explosion. [note 4]
About one fifth of the ejected rocks eventually return to planet from which they were launched. Davies (1998a) points out the possibility that microbes in these rocks might reseed a planet after its biosphere had been sterilised by huge impacts. This is a possible mechanism for life becoming re-established on Earth after the Late Heavy Bombardmant (Bortman 2000- note that Bortman does not consider this mechanism in his report).
Melosh recently estimated that, over the lifetime of the Earth, a few dozen Earth rocks might have made it to planets in nearby star systems (Melosh 2001, Hecht 2001). With journey times of millions of years the chances of any viable lifeforms reaching an Earth-like planet by this mechanism appear to be extremely slim [note 5]. As noted by Davies (1998a) this could not be expected to be a mechanism by which life spread widely throughout the galaxy.
References
Bortman H. (2000) 'Life Under Bombardment', NASA Astrobiology Institute, November 2000. http://nai.arc.nasa.gov/index.cfm?page=lifebombard
Davies P. (1998a) 'The Fifth Miracle: The Search for the Origin and Meaning of Life', Penguin Press.
Davies P. (1998b) 'Planetary Infestations', Sky & Telescope, September 1999.
Davies P. (1998c) 'Survivors from Mars', New Scientist, 12 September 1998.
Hecht J. (2001) 'Galactic Hitchhikers', New Scientist, 14 March 2001.
Hills J.G. (1981) 'Comet Showers and the Steady Infall of Comets from the Oort Cloud', The Astronomical Journal, Vol.86, No. 11 1730-1740. November 1981.
Mastrapa, R. M. E.; Glanzberg, H.; Head, J. N.; Melosh, H. J.; Nicholson, W. L. (2000) 'Survival of Bacillus Subtilis Spores and Deinococcus Radiodurans Cells Exposed to the Extreme Acceleration and Shock Predicted During Planetary Ejection', 31st Annual Lunar and Planetary Science Conference, abstract no. 2045
Mileikowsky C., Cucinotta F.A., Wilson J.W., Gladman B., Horneck G., Lindegren L., Melosh H.J., Rickman H., Valtonen M. and Zheng J.Q. (200) 'Risks threatening viable transfer of microbes between bodies in our solar system', Planetary and Space Science 48 (2000) 1107-1115.
Melosh H.J. (1994) 'Swapping Rocks: Exchange of Surface Material Among the Planets', The Planetary Report, The Planetary Society, July 1994.
Melosh H.J. (2001) 'Exchange of Meteoritic Material Between Stellar Systems', 32nd Annual Lunar and Planetary Science Conference, abstract no.2022.
Steel D. (1995) 'Rogue Asteroids and Doomsday Comets', John Wiley & Sons.
For more information and links see
http://www4.tpg.com.au/users/tps-seti/swaprock.html
Notes
1. Rocks in the size range of interest have an average mass of 7 tonnes but they tend to fragment during re-entry so that smaller pieces usually reach the surface of the destination planet.
2. The estimate of 150kg is based on Mileikowsky's estimate that 7.9x1013 grams is transferred over 500 million years. Melosh (2001) refers to estimates which suggest that, at present, about 500kg of Martian rocks larger than 100mm fall to Earth each year. Averaged over millions of years, the value would be higher - perhaps one tonne per year - so "hospitable" rocks make up roughly 15%. Two-thirds of these fall in the oceans. Steel (1995) indicates that at present, about 40,000 tonnes of extraterrestrial material collides with the Earth each year but when the effects of larger impacts are taken into account the average over long periods becomes 160,000 tonnes per year. The estimated Mars flux is therefore a very small proportion of all of the material colliding with the Earth.
3. It has been estimated that the average transit time between Mars and Earth is about one million years but the distribution is skewed to shorter transit times.
4. Although very thin compared to the Earth, Mar's atmosphere is dense enough to slow meteorites sufficiently so that they do not explode on impact with the surface. As with Europa, a lack of atmosphere also appears to make it unlikely that Earth-life would colonise the Moon by transpermia.
5. It has been estimated that every 100 million years or so another star system passes within 3000 AU of the Sun - well within the Oort Cloud (Hills 1981). I have suggested that such close approaches might increase the chances of transpermia between planetary systems. Although this would not make a difference to the overall statistics calculated by Melosh (that is, only a few dozen rocks would reach extra-solar planets over the lifetime of the Earth) the transit times might be reduced by this mechanism so that survival chances might be slightly better. I also suggested that close approaches by stars might increase the rate of bombardment of the Earth by comets disturbed from the Oort Cloud by the passing star. This could possibly increase the transpermia launch rate. However, in personal correspondence Melosh points out that close approaches by the other star systems would typically last no more than 10,000 years but the infall of comets from the Oort Cloud would take hundreds of thousands of years. Also ejection of rocks from our solar system, usually through encounters with Jupiter, typically takes tens of millions of years so the planetary system "will be long gone before the harvest from the increased cratering rate can be reaped".
Updates
- 9 Nov 02 Space.com: Why a Mars Rock Hits Earth Every Month (New work by Jay Melosh and colleagues reported in Science (subs required) - Transpermia is even more likely than first thought)
- 31 Jul 05 Glaciers on Mars - a safe landing for hitchhiking microbes from Earth - new discussion paper
19 Mar 06 BBC: Earth could seed Titan with life
12 Dec 08 SpaceDaily: Constant Comet Threat - star-induced comet showers may not be as dramatic as once thought. 29 Jul 10 AMEC2010: Potential for microbe colonisation of Mars by rocks launched into space by the Chicxulub impact + copy of powerpoint presentation. 3 Apr 15 Icarus: Dynamics of escaping Earth ejecta and their collision probability with different Solar System bodies.