Cosmic Rays and Terrestrial Life: A Brief Review
Dimitra Atri (Tata Institute), Adrian L. Melott (Univ. of Kansas)

TL;DR
This review explores how cosmic rays influence Earth's atmosphere, biological mutations, and the evolution of life, considering their varying flux over Earth's history and potential role in life's origin and development.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of mechanisms by which cosmic rays impact terrestrial life and discusses their possible influence on biological evolution and the origin of life.
Findings
Cosmic rays ionize the atmosphere and affect its chemistry.
Secondary particles from cosmic rays contribute to surface radiation doses.
Variations in cosmic ray flux may have influenced biological evolution.
Abstract
"The investigation into the possible effects of cosmic rays on living organisms will also offer great interest." - Victor F. Hess, Nobel Lecture, December 12, 1936 High-energy radiation bursts are commonplace in our Universe. From nearby solar flares to distant gamma ray bursts, a variety of physical processes accelerate charged particles to a wide range of energies, which subsequently reach the Earth. Such particles contribute to a number of physical processes occurring in the Earth system. A large fraction of the energy of charged particles gets deposited in the atmosphere, ionizing the atmosphere, causing changes in its chemistry and affecting the global electric circuit. Remaining secondary particles contribute to the background dose of cosmic rays on the surface and parts of the subsurface region. Life has evolved over the past ~ 3 billion years in presence of this background…
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