nineteenthly
Favorite Answer
I presume you mean around the star, and the answer is that it's unlikely because planets are still forming there.
StarryNight
In 1983, astronomers discovered dust orbiting Vega, suggesting that it had a solar system. Vega was thought to be only a couple of hundred million years old, probably too young for any planets to have spawned life. ... Vega is 2.15 times as massive as the sun, but between 625 million and 850 million years old.
?
It's a bit warm on Vega, about 17,000 degrees. That's even warmer than most earthly deserts. So no, I don't think so.
Ronald 7
Not the Star itself
But on a Viable Planet around its Habitable Zone Maybe
Barring Dangerous Radiation, the Bonic Barf Bunnies and other things
joedlh
Life is not possible on any star. It's too hot. Perhaps you were asking if it were possible that life exists on one of Vega's planets. Science doesn't have a ready answer because life has not been demonstrated to exist on any planet besides Earth. That is not to say that life doesn't exist anywhere else. It's just that the technology to find it does not yet exist. Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence, as they say. If a planet is in the Goldilocks zone around a stable star, we don't know if there are conditions that would prevent life evolving on it.