Microbes & Gravity
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Microbes & Gravity
Just curious, could Microbes survive thousands of times Earth Gravity?
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Thomas Paine
"For the living know that they shall die: but the dead know not any thing, neither have they any more a reward; for the memory of them is forgotten."
Ecclesiastes 9:5 (KJV)
I suspect that the gravity wouldn't crush them to death directly (at least not all of them), as at least some are small enough that self-loading is not significant.
However, the side-effects will, whether by hydrostatic pressure, rendering them immobile or disrupting the chemical reactions they depend on for survival.
However, the side-effects will, whether by hydrostatic pressure, rendering them immobile or disrupting the chemical reactions they depend on for survival.
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Not with any atmosphere present. French presses operate around 700 Atm as I recall; at thousands of g's even rarified atmosphere will exceed that handily.Just curious, could Microbes survive thousands of times Earth Gravity?
Lacking atmosphere you'd then have problems with surface boiling, homeostasis, and any type of metabolism I've seen is shot to hell.
Now if you don't care about doing anything while they are being subjected to a few thousand gravities, that I think they could pull off. First you'd freeze the buggers solid, then stransport them through the high g field, and then thaw back in a gentler gravity well. If you do that then I beleive the limiting factor should be the compressive strength of ice; and I think it should be up to the task.
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Re: Microbes & Gravity
I doubt they'd develop on such a planet in the first place.Kitsune wrote:Just curious, could Microbes survive thousands of times Earth Gravity?
Damien Sorresso
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Yeah, one of the Apollo expeditions (Apollo 12, IIRC) retrieved streptococcus bacteria, from the TV camera onboard one of the Surveyor probes, that had survived.tharkûn wrote:I don't know about Mars, but samples have been recovered from Luna from microbial hitchhikers. They were well and truly frozen, but still alive.
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