Overview
- Researchers published a Nature Astronomy paper on May 26, 2026 proposing a statistical biosignature that uses patterns of molecular diversity to distinguish biological from abiotic chemistry.
- The method compares the relative frequencies of related organic molecules so that life-driven mixes show different diversity patterns than chemistry produced by simple thermodynamic processes.
- Authors demonstrated the approach on Earth samples, meteorites and Ryugu data and say it needs only relative-abundance information that many past and present spacecraft instruments can provide.
- Astrobiologists warn the finding highlights a risk of 'false negatives' where life could be missed by searches tuned to Earth-like markers and call for lab work, computer models and AI to reanalyze data.
- Institutions are responding with new funding and research programs and the method could shape mission planning and ethical decisions about exploring and using potentially inhabited worlds.