Growth and replication of red rain cells at 121 oC and their red fluorescence
Rajkumar Gangappa (Univ. of Glamorgan UK) Chandra Wickramasinghe, (Cardiff Univ. UK), Milton Wainwright (Univ. Sheffield UK), A. Santhosh Kumar, (Cochin University India), Godfrey Louis (Cochin University India)

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that red rain cells from Kerala can survive, grow, and replicate at 121°C, exhibiting fluorescence similar to cosmic dust, hinting at possible extraterrestrial origins.
Contribution
It provides experimental evidence that red rain cells can grow at high temperatures and links their fluorescence to cosmic phenomena, suggesting an extraterrestrial connection.
Findings
Red rain cells survive and replicate at 121°C.
Cell proliferation increases with exposure time at high temperature.
Fluorescence matches that of cosmic dust emissions.
Abstract
We have shown that the red cells found in the Red Rain (which fell on Kerala, India, in 2001) survive and grow after incubation for periods of up to two hours at 121 oC . Under these conditions daughter cells appear within the original mother cells and the number of cells in the samples increases with length of exposure to 121 oC. No such increase in cells occurs at room temperature, suggesting that the increase in daughter cells is brought about by exposure of the Red Rain cells to high temperatures. This is an independent confirmation of results reported earlier by two of the present authors, claiming that the cells can replicate under high pressure at temperatures up to 300 oC. The flourescence behaviour of the red cells is shown to be in remarkable correspondence with the extended red emission observed in the Red Rectangle planetary nebula and other galactic and extragalactic dust…
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