Vida e morte nas marés galácticas

Este artigo me parece relevante também para a teoria de extinções periódicas devido às marés galácticas.

Friday, December 18, 2009

Galactic Tide May Have Influenced Life on Earth

The galactic tide is strong enough to influence Oort Cloud comets, which means it may also have helped shape our planet.

The Moon's tides have been an ever-present force in Earth's history, shaping the landscape and the lives of the creatures that inhabit it. Now there's a tantalising hint that the galactic tide may have played a significant role in Earth's past.

The work comes from Jozef Klacka at Comenius University in the Slovak Republic. He has calculated the strength of the galactic tide and its effect on the Solar System. His conclusion is that the tide is strong enough to significantly effect the orbital evolution of Oort Cloud comets.

That's a fascinating result. We've long known that the Moon's tides must have been crucial for the evolution of life on Earth. The constant ebb and flow of the oceans would have left sea life stranded on beaches, forcing adaptations that allowed these creatures to cope with conditions on land.

Astrobiologists also believe that comets played an important part in the development of life on Earth because the atmosphere and oceans were seeded, at least in part, by comets. By that way of thinking, the forces and processes that have shaped evolution stretch to the edge of the Solar System.

But if the galactic tide plays a role in sending these comets our way, then it looks as if we're part of a much larger web. Could it be that Earth and the life that has evolved here, is crucially dependent, not just on our planet, our star and our local interplanetary environment, but on the Milky Way galaxy itself?

Klacka has a lot more work to do to prove that the galactic tide plays such a role. But it might just be that the field of astrobiology has become a whole lot bigger.

Ref: arxiv.org/abs/0912.3112: Galactic Tide

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