For life to exist there are some major hurdles...

“The environmental requirements for life to exist depend quite strongly on the life form in question. The conditions for primitive life to exist, for example, are not nearly so demanding as they are for advanced life. Also, it makes a big difference how active the life form is and how long it remains in its environment. On this basis there are six distinct zones or regions in which life can exist.”

- Hugh Ross (Composer of the list - for some reason, he uses it as an evangilical tool.)

In order of the broadest to the narrowest they are as follows:

Complicating factors, however, are that unicellular, low metabolism life (extremophiles) typically is more easily subject to radiation damage and it has a low molecular repair rate. The origin of life problem is far more difficult for low metabolism life (H. James Cleaves II and John H. Chambers, “Extremophiles May Be Irrelevant to the Origin of Life,” Astrobiology, 4 (2004), pp. 1-9).

The following parameters of a planet, its planetary companions, its moon, its star, and its galaxy must have values falling within narrowly defined ranges for physical life of any kind to exist.

galaxy cluster type

galaxy size

galaxy type

galaxy mass distribution

galaxy location

decay rate of cold dark matter particles

hypernovae eruptions

supernovae eruptions

white dwarf binaries

proximity of solar nebula to a supernova eruption

timing of solar nebula formation relative to supernova eruption

number of stars in parent star birth aggregate

star formation history in parent star vicinity

birth date of the star-planetary system

parent star distance from center of galaxy

parent star distance from closest spiral arm

z-axis heights of star's orbit

quantity of galactic dust

number of stars in the planetary system

parent star age

parent star mass

parent star metallicity

parent star color

galactic tides

H3+ production

flux of cosmic ray protons

solar wind

parent star luminosity relative to speciation

surface gravity (escape velocity)

distance from parent star

inclination of orbit

orbital eccentricity

axial tilt

rate of change of axial tilt

rotation period * if longer: diurnal temperature differences would be too great

rate of change in rotation period

planet age

magnetic field

thickness of crust

albedo (ratio of reflected light to total amount falling on surface)

asteroidal and cometary collision rate

mass of body colliding with primordial Earth

timing of body colliding with primordial Earth

collision location of body colliding with primordial Earth

oxygen to nitrogen ratio in atmosphere

carbon dioxide level in atmosphere

water vapor level in atmosphere

atmospheric electric discharge rate

ozone level in atmosphere

oxygen quantity in atmosphere

nitrogen quantity in atmosphere

ratio of 40K, 235,238U, 232Th to iron for the planet

rate of interior heat loss

seismic activity

volcanic activity

rate of decline in tectonic activity

rate of decline in volcanic activity

timing of birth of continent formation

oceans-to-continents ratio

rate of change in oceans-to-continents ratio

global distribution of continents (for Earth)

frequency and extent of ice ages

soil mineralization

gravitational interaction with a moon

Jupiter distance

Jupiter mass

drift in major planet distances

major planet eccentricities

major planet orbital instabilities * if greater: orbit of life supportable planet would be pulled out of life support zone

mass of Neptune

Kuiper Belt of asteroids (beyond Neptune)

separation distances among inner terrestrial planets

atmospheric pressure

atmospheric transparency

magnitude and duration of sunspot cycle

continental relief

chlorine quantity in atmosphere

iron quantity in oceans and soils

tropospheric ozone quantity

stratospheric ozone quantity

mesospheric ozone quantity

quantity and extent of forest and grass fires

quantity of soil sulfer

biomass to comet infall ratio

density of quasars

density of giant galaxies in the early universe

giant star density in galaxy

rate of sedimentary loading at crustal subduction zones

poleward heat transport in planet's atmosphere

polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon abundance in solar nebula

phosphorus and iron absorption by banded iron formations

silicate dust annealing by nebular shocks

size of galactic central bulge

total mass of Kuiper Belt asteroids

solar magnetic activity level

number of hypernovae

timing of hypernovae production

masses of stars that become hypernovae

quantity of geobacteraceae

density of brown dwarfs

quantity of aerobic photoheterotrophic bacteria

average rainfall preciptiation

species of ocean life that are vital for the existence of all life

variation and timing of average rainfall precipitation

average slope or relief of the continental land masses

distance from nearest black hole

absorption rate of planets and planetismals by parent star

water absorption capacity of planet's lower mantle

gas dispersal rate by companion stars, shock waves, and molecular cloud expansion in the Sun's birthing star cluster

decay rate of cold dark matter particles

ratio of inner dark halo mass to stellar mass for galaxy

star rotation rate

rate of nearby gamma ray bursts

aerosol particle density emitted from forests

density of interstellar and interplanetary dust particles in vicinity of life-support planet

thickness of mid-mantle boundary

galaxy cluster density

star formation rate in solar neighborhood during past 4 billion years

variation in star formation rate in solar neighborhood during past 4 billion years

gamma-ray burst events

cosmic ray luminosity of Milky Way Galaxy

air turbulence in troposphere

primordial cosmic superwinds

smoking quasars

quantity of phytoplankton

quantity of iodocarbon-emitting marine organisms

mantle plume production

quantity of magnetars (proto-neutron stars with very strong magnetic fields)

frequency of gamma ray bursts in galaxy

parent star magnetic field

amount of outward migration of Neptune

Q-value (rigidity) of Earth during its early history

parent star distance from galaxy's corotation circle

average quantity of gas infused into the universe's first star clusters

frequency of late impacts by large asteroids and comets

level of supersonic turbulence in the infant universe

number density of the first metal-free stars to form in the universe

size of the carbon sink in the deep mantle of the planet

rate of growth of central spheroid for the galaxy

amount of gas infalling into the central core of the galaxy

level of cooling of gas infalling into the central core of the galaxy

ratio of dual water molecules, (H2O)2, to single water molecules, H2O, in the troposphere

heavy element abundance in the intracluster medium for the early universe

quantity of volatiles on and in Earth-sized planet in the habitable zone

pressure of the intra-galaxy-cluster medium

level of spiral substructure in spiral galaxy

mass of outer gas giant planet relative to inner gas giant planet

triggering of El Nino events by explosive volcanic eruptions

time window between the peak of kerogen production and the appearance of intelligent life

time window between the production of cisterns in the planet's crust that can effectively collect and store petroleum and natural gas and the appearance of intelligent life

efficiency of flows of silicate melt, hypersaline hydrothermal fluids, and hydrothermal vapors in the upper crust

quantity of dust formed in the ejecta of Population III supernovae

quantity and proximity of gamma-ray burst events relative to emerging solar nebula

heat flow through the planet's mantle from radiometric decay in planet's core

water absorption by planet's mantle

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Jack Anderson - 13 Nov 2006