ARTICLE AD BOX
Science·New
Remember those claims that signs of life may have been detected on an exoplanet? Scientists have been skeptical about the claim, and now new, independent research is adding to that skepticism.
A new paper suggests that there was too much noise in the data to support assertion
Nicole Mortillaro · CBC News
· Posted: Apr 29, 2025 4:00 AM EDT | Last Updated: 8 minutes ago
The search for life beyond our own planet is something that astronomers have been doing for decades now, with no results.
But on April 17, a study was published revealing that a team of astronomers using the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), led by Nikku Madhusudhan, had discovered gases on an exoplanet called K2-18b that could only be produced by life.
Right off the bat, many astronomers were a little skeptical about the claim, saying there wasn't robust evidence to support the findings.
"Discoveries like this ... usually takes a long time to confirm, and many times it turned out not true," Yanqin Wu told CBC News on the day it was announced. "That's just the disappointment in real scientific endeavour. Extraordinary claims usually takes a lot of proof and usually are wrong."
Now, a new independent analysis of the JWST data has found no evidence of biosignatures, signs that the planet's gases may have a biological origin.
Madhusudhan and his colleagues used data collected from JWST of the planet passing in front of its host star, K2-18, and the different molecules that were observed in the spectra. This method is useful for determining which chemicals are in the air of a planet.
The study found the presence of two gases — dimethyl sulfide, or DMS, and dimethyl disulfide, or DMDS — which are typically produced on Earth by algae.
But Jake Taylor, a planetary scientist who also studies exoplanets using JWST data, used that data and examined it using a different method than the Madhusudhan-led study and was unable to replicate the findings. He published his results on the pre-print site ArXiv.
WATCH | Scientists make 'major breakthrough' in search for life outside solar system: Scientists make 'major breakthrough' in search for life outside solar system
In his method, he used an "agnostic" approach, meaning he didn't look for any sulfur gases that could be signs of life like there are here on Earth. The result was a "flat line" rather than any wiggles in the data, meaning that the dips found in the initial study were statistical noise — random information that can effect study results.
Taylor said he was excited about the study and thought it was good in some ways, but "when it came to the atmospheric physics side, I noticed that they didn't give too much detail about their flat-line rejection tests."
He explained these tests are "kind of a standard within the field" to do first in order to ensure there isn't noise in the data.
He said he did speak with Madhusudhan personally about this last week, who reassured him that the rejection tests had been conducted, though they weren't contained in the study itself.
Though he said the current data from JWST didn't provide enough confidence in a biosignature detection, it doesn't mean it couldn't happen with additional data.
"It's a good first step in in this sort of endeavour, because this is a spectral range we've never seen before. So just that in itself is pretty cool," Taylor said. "We definitely would need more observations to get a better signal. And who knows, it might pop out, it might be there. It's just right now, the signal-to-noise ratio is not definitive."
Asked if there needs to be more rigorous examinations of such claims, Taylor said, "I think there needs to be more discussions about this. I do personally think that there needs to be multiple lines of evidence, and also there needs to be like a model independent confirmation that we see something."
Taylor admitted he was a big fan of The X-Files, a sci-fi show that largely focused on finding proof of alien life on Earth. Its most touted catchphrase was "I want to believe."
He also noted that planetary scientists looking for signs of life on exoplanets do really want to one day find that robust sign of life, though it's not like we could ever visit the exoplanet to confirm with certainty.
"We want to believe," he said. "But we want to do it correctly."
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Based in Toronto, Nicole covers all things science for CBC News. As an amateur astronomer, Nicole can be found looking up at the night sky appreciating the marvels of our universe. She is the editor of the Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada and the author of several books. In 2021, she won the Kavli Science Journalism Award from the American Association for the Advancement of Science for a Quirks and Quarks audio special on the history and future of Black people in science. You can send her story ideas at nicole.mortillaro@cbc.ca.
With files from Anand Ram