Cold Silicon-Based Aliens Exist? Evidence Against this Theory

in hive-109160 •  6 months ago 

Video Credit- PBS Space Time, YouTube

In many works of science fiction, aliens are described as being silicon-based life forms. Life on Earth is carbon-based, and evidence points to the fact that most life in the Universe will be carbon-based for several reasons.

Silicon is a very common element found on Earth in rocks in the soil. Like carbon, silicon can form four bonds and thus can create rings and a variety of scaffold molecules. As a student of biology, organic chemistry highlights the way that carbon's four bonds can help create molecules in such a way that stability can be preserved. Carbon can form strong bonds that enable life to thrive and to be resilient. Molecules such as benzene rings and alcohol serve a purpose that could not easily be replicated by Silicon for several reasons.

Several pieces of evidence point away from silicon-based life forms. Silicon does not interact well with water, and silicon based life would respire sand (SiO2) instead of the gas CO2 as carbon-based life forms do. Oxygen forms strong bonds with silicon, and thus a large amount of sand would accumulate inside of silicon-based lifeform's cells. About 2.2 pounds of C02 are respired by an adult human daily, which would be disastrous for a Silicon-based lifeform who might respire a similar volume of silicon-dioxide (solid sand).

Silicon-based life is improbable, but ammonia-based life or even Sulfur-based life is a possibility. Carbon is a great element to create rings and scaffold structures that facilitate the evolution of lifeforms. I enjoy the science fiction stories with Silicon-based lifeform's, but imagine their existence to be improbable.

Authors get paid when people like you upvote their post.
If you enjoyed what you read here, create your account today and start earning FREE STEEM!