Katherine Taylor for Quanta Magazine
Why does life exist?
Popular hypotheses credit a primordial soup, a bolt of lightning and a colossal stroke of luck.
But if a provocative new theory is correct, luck may have little to do with it. Instead, according to the physicist proposing the idea, the origin and subsequent evolution of life follow from the fundamental laws of nature and “should be as unsurprising as rocks rolling downhill.”
From the standpoint of physics, there is one essential difference between living things and inanimate clumps of carbon atoms: The former tend to be much better at capturing energy from their environment and dissipating that energy as heat.
Jeremy England, a 31-year-old assistant professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, has derived a mathematical formula that he believes explains this capacity. The formula, based on established physics, indicates that when a group of atoms is driven by an external source of energy (like the sun or chemical fuel) and surrounded by a heat bath (like the ocean or atmosphere), it will often gradually restructure itself in order to dissipate increasingly more energy. This could mean that under certain conditions, matter inexorably acquires the key physical attribute associated with life.
Kristian Peters
“You start with a random clump of atoms, and if you shine light on it for long enough, it should not be so surprising that you get a plant,” England said.
England’s theory is meant to underlie, rather than replace, Darwin’s theory of evolution by natural selection, which provides a powerful description of life at the level of genes and populations. “I am certainly not saying that Darwinian ideas are wrong,” he explained. “On the contrary, I am just saying that from the perspective of the physics, you might call Darwinian evolution a special case of a more general phenomenon.”
His idea, detailed in a paper and further elaborated in a talk he is delivering at universities around the world, has sparked controversy among his colleagues, who see it as either tenuous or a potential breakthrough, or both.
England has taken “a very brave and very important step,” said Alexander Grosberg, a professor of physics at New York University who has followed England’s work since its early stages. The “big hope” is that he has identified the underlying physical principle driving the origin and evolution of life, Grosberg said.
“Jeremy is just about the brightest young scientist I ever came across,” said Attila Szabo, a biophysicist in the Laboratory of Chemical Physics at the National Institutes of Health who corresponded with England about his theory after meeting him at a conference. “I was struck by the originality of the ideas.”
Others, such as Eugene Shakhnovich, a professor of chemistry, chemical biology and biophysics at Harvard University, are not convinced. “Jeremy’s ideas are interesting and potentially promising, but at this point are extremely speculative, especially as applied to life phenomena,” Shakhnovich said.
England’s theoretical results are generally considered valid. It is his interpretation — that his formula represents the driving force behind a class of phenomena in nature that includes life — that remains unproven. But already, there are ideas about how to test that interpretation in the lab.
“He’s trying something radically different,” said Mara Prentiss, a professor of physics at Harvard who is contemplating such an experiment after learning about England’s work. “As an organizing lens, I think he has a fabulous idea. Right or wrong, it’s going to be very much worth the investigation.”
Courtesy of Jeremy England
At the heart of England’s idea is the second law of thermodynamics, also known as the law of increasing entropy or the “arrow of time.” Hot things cool down, gas diffuses through air, eggs scramble but never spontaneously unscramble; in short, energy tends to disperse or spread out as time progresses. Entropy is a measure of this tendency, quantifying how dispersed the energy is among the particles in a system, and how diffuse those particles are throughout space. It increases as a simple matter of probability: There are more ways for energy to be spread out than for it to be concentrated.
Thus, as particles in a system move around and interact, they will, through sheer chance, tend to adopt configurations in which the energy is spread out. Eventually, the system arrives at a state of maximum entropy called “thermodynamic equilibrium,” in which energy is uniformly distributed. A cup of coffee and the room it sits in become the same temperature, for example.
As long as the cup and the room are left alone, this process is irreversible. The coffee never spontaneously heats up again because the odds are overwhelmingly stacked against so much of the room’s energy randomly concentrating in its atoms.
Although entropy must increase over time in an isolated or “closed” system, an “open” system can keep its entropy low — that is, divide energy unevenly among its atoms — by greatly increasing the entropy of its surroundings. In his influential 1944 monograph “What Is Life?” the eminent quantum physicist Erwin Schrödinger argued that this is what living things must do. A plant, for example, absorbs extremely energetic sunlight, uses it to build sugars, and ejects infrared light, a much less concentrated form of energy. The overall entropy of the universe increases during photosynthesis as the sunlight dissipates, even as the plant prevents itself from decaying by maintaining an orderly internal structure.
Life does not violate the second law of thermodynamics, but until recently, physicists were unable to use thermodynamics to explain why it should arise in the first place. In Schrödinger’s day, they could solve the equations of thermodynamics only for closed systems in equilibrium. In the 1960s, the Belgian physicist Ilya Prigogine made progress on predicting the behavior of open systems weakly driven by external energy sources (for which he won the 1977 Nobel Prize in chemistry). But the behavior of systems that are far from equilibrium, which are connected to the outside environment and strongly driven by external sources of energy, could not be predicted.
This situation changed in the late 1990s, due primarily to the work of Chris Jarzynski, now at the University of Maryland, and Gavin Crooks, now at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. Jarzynski and Crooks showed that the entropy produced by a thermodynamic process, such as the cooling of a cup of coffee, corresponds to a simple ratio: the probability that the atoms will undergo that process divided by their probability of undergoing the reverse process (that is, spontaneously interacting in such a way that the coffee warms up). As entropy production increases, so does this ratio: A system’s behavior becomes more and more “irreversible.” The simple yet rigorous formula could in principle be applied to any thermodynamic process, no matter how fast or far from equilibrium. “Our understanding of far-from-equilibrium statistical mechanics greatly improved,” Grosberg said. England, who is trained in both biochemistry and physics, started his own lab at MIT two years ago and decided to apply the new knowledge of statistical physics to biology.
Using Jarzynski and Crooks’ formulation, he derived a generalization of the second law of thermodynamics that holds for systems of particles with certain characteristics: The systems are strongly driven by an external energy source such as an electromagnetic wave, and they can dump heat into a surrounding bath. This class of systems includes all living things. England then determined how such systems tend to evolve over time as they increase their irreversibility. “We can show very simply from the formula that the more likely evolutionary outcomes are going to be the ones that absorbed and dissipated more energy from the environment’s external drives on the way to getting there,” he said. The finding makes intuitive sense: Particles tend to dissipate more energy when they resonate with a driving force, or move in the direction it is pushing them, and they are more likely to move in that direction than any other at any given moment.
“This means clumps of atoms surrounded by a bath at some temperature, like the atmosphere or the ocean, should tend over time to arrange themselves to resonate better and better with the sources of mechanical, electromagnetic or chemical work in their environments,” England explained.
Courtesy of Michael Brenner/Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Self-replication (or reproduction, in biological terms), the process that drives the evolution of life on Earth, is one such mechanism by which a system might dissipate an increasing amount of energy over time.
As England put it, “A great way of dissipating more is to make more copies of yourself.”
In a September paper in the Journal of Chemical Physics, he reported the theoretical minimum amount of dissipation that can occur during the self-replication of RNA molecules and bacterial cells, and showed that it is very close to the actual amounts these systems dissipate when replicating.
He also showed that RNA, the nucleic acid that many scientists believe served as the precursor to DNA-based life, is a particularly cheap building material. Once RNA arose, he argues, its “Darwinian takeover” was perhaps not surprising.
The chemistry of the primordial soup, random mutations, geography, catastrophic events and countless other factors have contributed to the fine details of Earth’s diverse flora and fauna. But according to England’s theory, the underlying principle driving the whole process is dissipation-driven adaptation of matter.
This principle would apply to inanimate matter as well. “It is very tempting to speculate about what phenomena in nature we can now fit under this big tent of dissipation-driven adaptive organization,” England said. “Many examples could just be right under our nose, but because we haven’t been looking for them we haven’t noticed them.”
Scientists have already observed self-replication in nonliving systems. According to new research led by Philip Marcus of the University of California, Berkeley, and reported in Physical Review Letters in August, vortices in turbulent fluids spontaneously replicate themselves by drawing energy from shear in the surrounding fluid. And in a paper in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Michael Brenner, a professor of applied mathematics and physics at Harvard, and his collaborators present theoretical models and simulations of microstructures that self-replicate. These clusters of specially coated microspheres dissipate energy by roping nearby spheres into forming identical clusters. “This connects very much to what Jeremy is saying,” Brenner said.
Besides self-replication, greater structural organization is another means by which strongly driven systems ramp up their ability to dissipate energy. A plant, for example, is much better at capturing and routing solar energy through itself than an unstructured heap of carbon atoms. Thus, England argues that under certain conditions, matter will spontaneously self-organize. This tendency could account for the internal order of living things and of many inanimate structures as well. “Snowflakes, sand dunes and turbulent vortices all have in common that they are strikingly patterned structures that emerge in many-particle systems driven by some dissipative process,” he said. Condensation, wind and viscous drag are the relevant processes in these particular cases.
“He is making me think that the distinction between living and nonliving matter is not sharp,” said Carl Franck, a biological physicist at Cornell University, in an email. “I’m particularly impressed by this notion when one considers systems as small as chemical circuits involving a few biomolecules.”
Wilson Bentley
England’s bold idea will likely face close scrutiny in the coming years.
He is currently running computer simulations to test his theory that systems of particles adapt their structures to become better at dissipating energy. The next step will be to run experiments on living systems.
He is currently running computer simulations to test his theory that systems of particles adapt their structures to become better at dissipating energy. The next step will be to run experiments on living systems.
Prentiss, who runs an experimental biophysics lab at Harvard, says England’s theory could be tested by comparing cells with different mutations and looking for a correlation between the amount of energy the cells dissipate and their replication rates.
“One has to be careful because any mutation might do many things,” she said. “But if one kept doing many of these experiments on different systems and if [dissipation and replication success] are indeed correlated, that would suggest this is the correct organizing principle.”
Brenner said he hopes to connect England’s theory to his own microsphere constructions and determine whether the theory correctly predicts which self-replication and self-assembly processes can occur — “a fundamental question in science,” he said.
Having an overarching principle of life and evolution would give researchers a broader perspective on the emergence of structure and function in living things, many of the researchers said. “Natural selection doesn’t explain certain characteristics,” said Ard Louis, a biophysicist at Oxford University, in an email. These characteristics include a heritable change to gene expression called methylation, increases in complexity in the absence of natural selection, and certain molecular changes Louis has recently studied.
If England’s approach stands up to more testing, it could further liberate biologists from seeking a Darwinian explanation for every adaptation and allow them to think more generally in terms of dissipation-driven organization. They might find, for example, that “the reason that an organism shows characteristic X rather than Y may not be because X is more fit than Y, but because physical constraints make it easier for X to evolve than for Y to evolve,” Louis said.
“People often get stuck in thinking about individual problems,” Prentiss said. Whether or not England’s ideas turn out to be exactly right, she said, “thinking more broadly is where many scientific breakthroughs are made.”
Emily Singer contributed reporting.
This article originally appeared at Quanta Magazine. Copyright 2014. Follow Quanta Magazine on Twitter.
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Read more: http://www.quantamagazine.org/20140122-a-new-physics-theory-of-life/#ixzz3LNEL4Nxw
Hmmmm, Mars must have been hit by millions of comets then, not only to create the oceans, but to keep up with the boil-off rate. I wonder if you could tell us, when was the last comet to hit Mars?
"There are some ideas so preposterous that only an intellectual will believe them." . - Malcolm Muggeridge
http://fcit.usf.edu/florida/photos/native/lemoyne/lemoyne8/photos/lemoy804.jpg
Because an act happens on one planet doesn't mean that same act on a different planet will have the same outcome. Physics 101
Comets hit Jupiter every minute for as long as we have known it's existence and it's made of hydrogen and helium
Life came from an insane # of trial and errors and this is the outcome. Nothing more to it.
An analogy is spilling water down a rock with many ridges and asking one at landing place of where the water finally ended how it got there.
So no we do not expell electrical negative waste. By the way we have a charge and stuff but in the sum we get rid of what we take in. 100 years of adding more positive charged particals would result in interesting effects that keeps us away from functioning. We work the way we work since we self regulate. Currently most people eat to much resulting in acids requiring all sorts of adaptation that leads to illness (dont ask what I all had). People who draw in unprocessed raw fruite and vegetables will live some months to years in great shape and than fall apart or get fat (yeah fruit acid takes over and replaces urinic acid in the urin making the body store urinic acid which results in high amount of unhealthy body fat).
Makes one wonder if knowledge can somehow be acquired in more weird ways than we acknowledge.
It's not science if you can't falsify it.
Jeremy England is indeed on the wrong track by more closely exploring the heterogeneous nature of our universe and in finality, how everything is messed up within the whole.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e91D5UAz-f4
And the first paper (just made public today):
http://arxiv.org/abs/1412.1875
damn, mr. England has answered the consciousness question too ;-)
it will take f-o-r-e-v-e-r to answer the evolution question ;-)
So the question is, is this distribution and getting rid of energy is really a driving force? I like the statistical idea of recombination and the difference between the chance of combination and the chance of decomposition that forms a chemical system. There are states of certain stability and those states might involve many cycles. As more elements you add as the distribution ratio changes you get other systems.
If he can explain the way those system stabilize and evolve and fight something behind the rules making it a more simple more basic rule explaining other rules... fine. If not fine too.
The real question can only be answered in a simulation. And we might be decades or even centuries away from building systems allowing us to simulate that in more detail and accurateness.
Maybe one day we wont need to fly to each star because we know more exactly where to look at. Do some basic research, run simulation and check the chances of life... . But lets wait some more time... just some decades... .
also easier to understand is easy.
First two background facts:
(1) The basic properties of elementary particles
ensure atoms of lots of quite different elements,
~100, not even counting isotopes.
(2) The basic chemistry of the atoms permits a lot
of really complicated chemistry, including its
special case biology. E.g., many of the energy
level differences are really tiny which says that
for the energy available, e.g., here on earth from
the sun, lots of different chemistry can happen.
E.g., sure, with hydrogen, oxygen, and carbon, we
can get CO2, CO, H2O, H2O2, but we can also get all
the hydrocarbons, with long chains, and much more.
Then with (1) and (2), one of the things that can
happen is chemical organizations that last and are
easy to notice (i.e., not just some goo). One way
the chemical organizations have of lasting is
reproduction.
Why reproduction? Because building an instance of
life took a LONG time so to have more instances it's
much easier (more likely) to reproduce the last
instance instead of starting again from just simple
chemistry.
Why sexual reproduction? Because as S. Ulam
explained, at each generation we get more variety
and, thus, more adaptability.
So, we get species -- complicated, lasting, easy to
notice, that reproduce, often sexually. That's what
we call life.
Why did it happen at all? Because due to the
complexity of the chemistry it can, and here on
earth it had ballpark 1/4th age of the universe to
happen.
Why is it so easy to notice? Because for any
relatively complex and lasting species on earth,
e.g., us, the life that is here on earth is easy to
notice because that life is so plentiful and stable.
Why plentiful? Because that's a byproduct of the
variety and ability of the basic chemistry to fill
niches. That is, once get one species, slightly
tweak the chemistry, e.g., with sexual reproduction,
mutations, etc., and get lots more species. Don't
be fooled: At the level of the chemistry, the
species are much more alike than we would guess.
That is, there are fewer major differences than meet
the eye.
Why stable? Because it takes so darned long
(compared with what we regard as 'stable') to get
any life going, ballpark 1/4th the age of the
universe, that we don't get really new, different,
and easy to notice forms of life springing up right
along. That is, we don't get a new species as easy
to notice as, say, kitty cats, as frequently as a
new snowflake or sunset picture (or a new
bacterium). Moreover, basically life on earth only
happened once, via DNA, and once it got going it
essentially out competed other alternatives. So,
the species that are left for us to observe are just
the lasting ones, and that is what we point to as
'life'.
Once life developed, why didn't it just stop there?
That is, why did we get life based on DNA which is
so astoundingly flexible? Apparently because the
chemistry has so much variety that the chemistry of
the first life could not resist change.
But the changes have always been just incremental
and opportunistic and not planned for the long term;
so life should be vulnerable, say, to some new
bacterium. So, how come we have had long term
results anyway? We are vulnerable, e.g., to the
Black Death, but the variety in the chemistry keeps
saving the day.
What if the chemistry let life develop faster? Then
there would still be some 'champion' forms of life,
but maybe they would get new competitors more
frequently until there was a champion species that
was so good that a better competitor was so rare
that the champion would last a long time. That is,
as life generates new champion species, we expect
that the time a species remains the champion gets
longer and longer. That is, keep having frequent
throne succession dramas until get a king that
lasts.
Why do we have species as capable as humans at all?
Humans descended from the first mammals, and 65
million years ago they were, say, just little mice.
It wasn't clear that in the next 65 million years
the little mice would have a species as advanced as
humans as descendants.
Why not some form of life more advanced than humans?
Wait another 65 million years and see. Or, guess
that now humans will 'advance' mostly via their
inventions.
Where will the 'ascent of life' stop? When it has
already understood and exploited the universe as
much as is effective for 'ascent'.
With the claim (a) that the basic chemistry has a
lot of variety and ability to fill niches and (b)
that on earth DNA out competed alternatives, on a
different planet there should be quite different
life, e.g., not based on DNA? Right.
Why is the universe, with its complicated chemistry,
etc., here at all? We don't know.
In itself it's a great leap in thinking; we normally tend to expect something miraculous, something out of the ordinary at the core of a great change. If this theory holds out, it will surely be a breakthrough in many things.
LOL!!
Wow, just wow!!!