1 / 10

The Astrobiology Research Activity at INAF-Osservatorio Astronomico di Palermo

Angela Ciaravella. The Astrobiology Research Activity at INAF-Osservatorio Astronomico di Palermo. Astrobiology: interdisciplinary study of life in space, combining aspects of astronomy, biology and geology. Study the effects of X-ray radiation on biological molecules:

santa
Download Presentation

The Astrobiology Research Activity at INAF-Osservatorio Astronomico di Palermo

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Angela Ciaravella The Astrobiology Research Activity at INAF-Osservatorio Astronomico di Palermo Astrobiology: interdisciplinary study of life in space, combining aspects of astronomy, biology and geology • Study the effects of X-ray radiation on biological molecules: • DNA free and clay adsorbed in water solution • Amino Acids in water solution • Since 2005 building the Laboratory for Experimental AstroBiology (LEAB) XACT

  2. Experimental Astrobiology at OAPA Origin of Life Early X-ray and UV radiation Synthesis of the building blocks of life UV + X-ray irradiation of ice analogoues Life started on the Earth 3.8 – 4 × 109 yr Harsch radiation field Many uncertanties on the Earth atmosphere Effects of radiation on Organic molecules A new facility (LEAB) for a more realistic scenario DNA and Amino Acids Irradiation Experiments

  3. Origin of Life in space on the Earth Organic molecules are in: ▪ Interstellar clouds ▪ Micrometeorites (0.01 – 0.1mm) today: 50- 100 tons/day ▪ Meteorites (+amino acids) Heavy bombardment by comets, meteorites and micrometeorites main carriers of organic material 4.2 - 3.9 × 109 yr ago = 103× today value Miller’s Experiment Hp: Earth Atmosphere (NH3, CH4, H2 + H2O vapor) + Spark discarge Res: many organic compounds including amino acids However: 1) H rich atmosphere quickly lost 2) N2, CO, CO2 and H2O inefficient for organic molecules Murchison Miller Glycine Alanine Valine Serine Proline ….. UV ? Many open questions: Experiment & Results Why just UV? Amino Acids high photo-distruction rate Protection mechanisms H2O, CO, CO2, CH3OH, NH3 (Muñoz-Caro et al.; Bernstein et al. Nat. 2002) The building blocks of life were built

  4. X-ray Emission from Solar Type Stars:I Sun @ max Sun @ min Early X-ray Sun: more active, hard and bright …but today is a modest X-ray source (LX = 1027 – 1030 erg/sec) • X-ray emission fades much more rapidly than UV. • The variations depends on the hardness of radiation: the hardest the fastest (Micela 2002). • In the 1-10 keV range, X photons @ Earth were >103higher than today when the Sun was only 108 yr old.

  5. X-ray Emission from Solar Type Stars: II Young Stars are Very Active in X-ray LX = 1031 – 1033 erg/sec • energetic radiation, very huge daily or weekly X-ray flares (Feigelson \& Montmerle 1999;Feigelson et al. 2003) • T Tauri showflares emitting at 8 keV for more than two day (Favata et al. 2005). • Very large flaring structures ( L » R* ) • not found in more evolved star • X-rays from the flare can heat up the planet-forming disk

  6. X-ray Irradiation of DNA The Sun today (1.5 –12.4 keV) (erg sec-1 cm -2 ) Clay Ads. Free 10-5 minimum 8 months 3 × 10-3maximum 19 hours 10-1large flares 34 min (erg sec-1 cm -2 ) (keV) Al 1.49 0.15 Ti 4.51 0.17 Cu 8.04 0.20 Irradiation Dose : 102 - 5.8 × 104 erg ⃟⃟ ⃟Clay Adsorbed DNA is resistent ΔΔΔto the X-ray irradiation ***Free DNA is severely damaged by X-rays and the damage depends on the energy dose rather than the hardness of radiation (Ciaravella et al 2004,Int. J. Atrb.)

  7. X-ray Irradiation of Amino Acids TryptophanC11H12N2O2 Preliminary Results • X-rays break the aliphatic chain: • Alanine • Alanine-Alanine peptide • UV (2780 Å) breaks the aromatic group • Solvent plays an important role (Ciaravella et al 2007, in prep)

  8. The LEAB Facility: Why? UV IR Spectroscopy X-ray Mass Spectrometer Simulate space conditions : • A cold finger with T=10 -300 K ± 1 K • A more realistic scenario for the synthesis of amino acids: • Not only UV HI Lya (usually used) • X-ray source (< 20 keV) (no used so far) • more penetrating into protoplanetary disk and dust grains • Multi-wavelength source quiete & flaring emission • Big chamber (20 ×30 cm): • allowing for many simultaneous diagnostics and irradiation sources • High clean vacuum (~10-11 mbar) oil-free vacuum pumping systems • Mass spectrometer system up to 200 amu ~ 80 k€

  9. ThePast, OngoingandFuture Experimental Plan X-ray irradiation of free & clay adsorbed DNA in water solution X-ray & UV irradiation of Amino Acids in icy mixtures Survival X-ray & UV irradiation of Amino Acids in water solution Spring-Summer 2008 Amino acids in icy mixture implanted into different substrates Clays can protect DNA from X-ray & UV radiation Protection ▪ Molecular complexity sustainable in space ▪ May radiation induce formation of more complex molecular structures Complexity End 2008-2009 1) Synthesis of amino acids 2) Synthesis of amino acids inside cavities Synthesis

  10. Funds & Collaborations Sources of funds: • Local Obs. (Director) (main source! ~ 70 k€ ) • PRIN-INAF 2006 - 60k€ ( 50 k€ OAPA; ~20 k€ lab.) • ASI call“Nuove Tecnologie e Spin-in: selezione di idee”Nov. 2006 proposal(selected) • FP7_ITN (Initial Training Network)): COMIS:Complex Organic Molecules in Space : the first step toward understanding life in the Universe (selected)(1 Early Stage Researcher) • FEBO:Facility for Exo-Biology Observations (ASI submitted) • FP7_TNA (Trans National Activity) within Europlanet(in preparation) XACT + LEAB facilities Collaborations: • C. Cecchi-Pestellini (INAF-OACA) • N. La Barbera, S. Giarrusso (INAF-IASF) • Chemists: (F. Mingoia; A. Venezia - CNR/INSM) • Biologists:(A. Puglia, M. Franchi, E. Gallori;Univ. Palermo & Firenze) • European scientists (Muñoz-Caro, Horneck, ……..)

More Related