One way to understand the potential for life on far-off planets—those in other solar systems that orbit different stars—is to study a planet's atmosphere. Telescopic images often capture traces of gases that may indicate life and habitable planets. But findings from a new study led by researchers at the University of Colorado Boulder challenge this idea: Scientists have created one type of gas often seen as an indicator of life in a chemistry lab with no organisms present.
Of course they can?
First indicators of life will be chiral markers in a unified direction in organic molecules (easy to detect with spectroscopy)
Indicators of life can be as little as an unnatural amount of unreracted volatile molecules.