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417 points fuidani | 2 comments | | HN request time: 0.401s | source
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weberer ◴[] No.43714466[source]
Here's the primary source

https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.3847/2041-8213/adc1c8

They possibly detected dimethyl sulfide, which is only known to be produced by living organisms.

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teamonkey ◴[] No.43717206[source]
A lot of science papers are like “we found a hint of this thing, we need to do more research” and it’s reported as “ALIENS??!?”

I understand why this is the case but I think it can lead to a loss in trust in science when the reporting jumps to conclusions that aren’t supported by the research itself.

In this case the abstract is far more grounded. In particular,

> The observations also provided a tentative hint of dimethyl sulfide (DMS), a possible biosignature gas, but the inference was of low statistical significance.

> We find that the spectrum cannot be explained by most molecules predicted for K2-18 b, with the exception of DMS and dimethyl disulfide (DMDS), also a potential biosignature gas.

> More observations are needed to increase the robustness of the findings and resolve the degeneracy between DMS and DMDS. The results also highlight the need for additional experimental and theoretical work to determine accurate cross sections of important biosignature gases and identify potential abiotic sources.

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1. x-yl ◴[] No.43718937[source]
I think you have misread the abstract. The 'low statistical significance' was a [prior work](https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.3847/2041-8213/acf577). This paper has increased the significance to 3-sigmas which is on the lower end but still quite significant.
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2. teamonkey ◴[] No.43719341[source]
Yes you’re right, thanks.