The electric discharge experiment, known as the Miller-Urey experiment, is one of the experiments to understand the origin of life on Earth. The experiment involved simulating the Earth’s early atmosphere by introducing methane(CH4), ammonia(NH3), and nitrogen(N2) gases, and applying energy through electric discharge. Resulting solution was found to contain amino acids such as glycine(C2H5NO2), alanine( C3H7NO2), histidine(C6H9N3O2), proline(C5H9NO2), and valine(C5H11NO2). These amino acids were compared with the results of the recent experiment (Parker et al. 2014). Interestingly, the electric discharge produced C2 swan band and CN emission and it was newly found in gas phase. These two emission bands are commonly observed in comets.