More than one exo-biologist has maintained that life on earth may have originated from microbes that hitched a ride on meteors. It is quite likely therefore that if microbes from earth reached another planet as a result of some form of contamination, they could multiply and create new life on that planet as well.
If there were already native life forms on that planet, the effect could be utterly disastrous.
2006-10-20 21:34:24
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Fist of all, it is not the way interplanetary shuttle works. You launch your motor vehicle right into a flow orbit that's an ellipse that's tangential to the orbits of the two Earth and Mars. You time the launch so as that the motor vehicle reaches the orbit of Mars on the comparable time and place that Mars itself does. it is an elliptical orbit it is fullyyt between the orbits of Earth and Mars, and would not come everywhere close to the solar. Your 2d question seems to be greater approximately looking a right away line via area between the Earth and Mars, which should not be functional for many motives, maximum mandatory of that's that it might require massive skill. although you are able to _look_ in a right away line from Earth to Mars almost all of the time, apart from a incredibly short era while Mars is on the a procedures area of the solar. How close you are able to shop on with Mars while it passes at the back of the solar relies upon on the generic and placement of your telescope. We robotically watch planets pass at the back of the solar with the SOHO photograph voltaic observatory satellite tv for pc, while Mars is in basic terms out of sight for some days, if in any respect.
2016-10-02 12:43:15
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answer #2
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answered by Erika 4
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They would probably die because they are used to live in an earthly enviroment (with plenty of water and oxygen).
If there would be transmutations and they survive in about 3.5 million years there would be life or somethin like it on that planet.
That would be a great experiment for the study of evolution and a very dangerous one!
2006-10-21 02:00:55
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answer #3
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answered by Ioanna 2
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I suppose the bacteria would all die for lack of food or radiation, and that would be a real shame because some bacteria are good bacteria.
2006-10-20 21:33:14
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answer #4
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answered by angle_of_deat_69 5
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watch the movie war of the worlds with tom cruise and that will show the effects of bacteria on a race outside of this world. Granted, it is just a movie, but kinda shows you how it could have a massive impact!
2006-10-20 21:41:15
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answer #5
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answered by brian c 5
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prolly nothing,but it depends on the condition of the planet,to cold the bacteria would freez death,to hot,not good either,alot of things involved for bacteria to expand or grow.
like the enviroment on earth is kind of ideal for bacteria.
why do you think we have so many here..lol
2006-10-20 21:40:33
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answer #6
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answered by byciclerabbit 3
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The main consequence is it would contaminate the pristine environment we were studying, including searching for life on. We want to be sure any life we find is native, thereby answering one of the biggest questions out there.
2006-10-20 21:44:59
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answer #7
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answered by SAN 5
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There are so vast a percentage of planets unlike our own that bacteria is not going to remain viable. There is so small a chance that bacteria would ever get to one that it could live on.... please don't stay up late worrying.
2006-10-20 21:34:03
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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Bacteria wud die because conditions for sex is nt ideal in other planet.
2006-10-20 23:55:51
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answer #9
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answered by Einstein 1
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specie evolve becaz of radiation and acorrding to most scientists the radiation can only worsen the evolution that mean it has a negative impact in shorts either they will die of they will become mutated because of immence amount of radiation than die but theyll die surly
my father is a scientist he told me
2006-10-20 21:43:10
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answer #10
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answered by sunny k 2
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