The study of a bacterium thriving deep in a South African dark gold mine suggests that extreme microbes that live in hostile places on Earth may feed off galactic cosmic rays.
"When you have radiation penetrating deep below the surface, where there might be water on Mars or (Jupiter's moon) Europa, then it could start chemical reactions that life could use," said study author Dimitra Atri, a researcher at the Blue Marble Space Institute of Science in the US.
The bacterium Candidatus Desulforudis audaxviator, found about 2.8 kilometres deep, lives off the energy from radioactive isotopes of uranium, thorium and potassium in the rocks there.
Ionising radiation from these isotopes breaks down water in the area into hydrogen gas, which the bacterium can use as fuel, and helps to generate other biologically useful molecules, 'Live Science' reported.
Galactic cosmic rays possess much higher energy than other sources of radiation on Earth.
The energy flow could extend to potential life on other planets as well, he said.
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