Abstract
The
emergence of life on the earth has attracted intense attention but the
mechanism of it still remains an unsolved question. A key problem is that it
has been left unclear why a living organism, which is regarded as an open
reaction system, can demonstrate dynamic self-organization leading to
highly-ordered structures and adaptive and evolutionary behavior. This paper shows by computer
simulation that (1) an open reaction network is a network of irreversible
processes and for this reason spontaneously reaches a stationary state and (2)
a stationary state thus formed is stable against a fluctuation, namely it has
self-organizing ability. Strikingly, self-organizing ability can emerge in a prebiotic chemical
system with no special mechanism for overcoming disturbances by the second law
of thermodynamics. The above self-organizing
ability leads to adaptive and evolutionary behavior and has large
potential for producing highly organized chemical structures, and is expected
to have played a fundamental role in
the emergence of life on the primitive earth.
Supplementary materials
Title
MS(arXiv)
Description
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