Laboratory Studies of Methane and Its Relationship to Prebiotic Chemistry
Kensei Kobayashi, Wolf D. Geppert, Nathalie Carrasco, Nils G. Holm,, Olivier Mousis, Maria Elisabetta Palumbo, J. Hunter Waite, Naoki Watanabe,, Lucy M. Ziurys

TL;DR
This paper reviews laboratory experiments on methane's role in prebiotic chemistry, highlighting its significance in Earth's early atmosphere, submarine systems, and extraterrestrial environments like Titan.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive summary of experimental studies on methane's role in chemical evolution across terrestrial and extraterrestrial settings.
Findings
Methane was key in early Earth organic synthesis.
Extraterrestrial methane contributes to prebiotic chemistry.
Laboratory simulations include Titan and hydrothermal systems.
Abstract
In order to examine how the terrestrial life emerged, a number of laboratory experiments have been conducted since the 1950s. Methane has been one of the key molecules in these studies. In earlier studies, strongly reducing gas mixtures containing methane and ammonia were mainly used to simulate possible reactions in primitive Earth atmosphere, and amino acids and other organic compounds were detected. Since the primitive Earth atmosphere was estimated to be less reducing, contribution of extraterrestrial organics to the origin of life is considered quite important. Extraterrestrial organic chemistry has been experimentally and theoretically studied intensively, including laboratory experiments simulating interstellar molecular reactions. Endogenous and exogenous organics should have been supplied to the primitive ocean. Now submarine hydrothermal systems are considered one of the…
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