On the Rate of Abiogenesis from a Bayesian Informatics Perspective

Life appears to have emerged relatively quickly on the Earth, a fact sometimes used to justify a high rate of spontaneous abiogenesis ( ) among Earth-like worlds. Conditioned upon a single datum-the time of earliest evidence for life ( )-previous Bayesian formalisms for the posterior distribution of...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inAstrobiology Vol. 18; no. 12; p. 1574
Main Authors Chen, Jingjing, Kipping, David
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 01.12.2018
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Summary:Life appears to have emerged relatively quickly on the Earth, a fact sometimes used to justify a high rate of spontaneous abiogenesis ( ) among Earth-like worlds. Conditioned upon a single datum-the time of earliest evidence for life ( )-previous Bayesian formalisms for the posterior distribution of have demonstrated how inferences are highly sensitive to the priors. Rather than attempt to infer the true posterior, we here compute the relative change to when new experimental/observational evidence is introduced. By simulating posterior distributions and resulting entropic information gains, we compare three experimental pressures on : (1) evidence for an earlier start to life, , (2) constraints on spontaneous abiogenesis from the laboratory, and (3) an exoplanet survey for biosignatures. First, we find that experiments 1 and 2 can only yield lower limits on , unlike 3. Second, evidence for an earlier start to life can yield negligible information on if [Formula: see text]. Vice versa, experiment 2 is uninformative when [Formula: see text]. While experiment 3 appears the most direct means of measuring , we highlight that early starts inform us of the conditions of abiogenesis and that laboratory experiments could succeed in building new life. Altogether, the three experiments are complementary, and we encourage activity in all to solve this grand challenge.
ISSN:1557-8070
DOI:10.1089/ast.2018.1836