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Is Saturn's Titan a Key to Life Throughout the Milky Way?

quarta-feira, 24 de junho de 2009 ·

Is Saturn's Titan a Key to Life Throughout the Milky Way?

OverheadOfSaturn&TitanSgnd NASA’s Cassini spacecraft buzzed Titan last year, coming close
enough to taste the Saturnian moon’s atmosphere.  The data acquired has
implications for our understanding of life throughout the galaxy, as
well as Earth’s own past.

The second largest moon in the solar system, Titan has long been of
interest for hopeful exobioligists.  As the only other body we know of
with surface bodies of liquid, complete with nitrogen, methane and
complete seasonal weather weather patterns (similar to Earth’s).  It
even has beaches, though you’ll need a little more than a swimsuit to
visit.  Vast bodies of chemicals constantly stirred by wind and wave,
heated over a gentle sunlight heat with the occasional dash of articles
from Saturn’s magnetosphere for spice - a perfect recipe for life.
Just like a certain planet you might be familiar with (look down if you
forget).

Of course there a few minor differences from our own blue-green globe.
There’s no oxygen for one thing, but if you think that’s a problem then
you’re guilty of “aerobic respiration prejudice” (don’t worry, most
multicellular organisms are).  It’s also really quite amazingly cold -
so cold that it has awesomely-named “cryovolcanoes”, where boiled (or
even just melted) water is enough to set off seismic-level explosions.
Again, that’s a barrier that’s been overcome by homegrown Earth
bacteria, so there’s no reason it couldn’t be managed elsewhere.

Cassini’s onboard instruments have detected hydrocarbons containing up
to seven carbon atoms.  How important is that for life?  Here’s a hint:
molecules with carbon in them are called organic, and those without are
inorganic.  Carbon is kind of a big deal, and the more (and more
complicated) carbon compounds present the further towards the great
cosmic chemical cocktail that is “life” you are.  Some scientists
believe that the Titanian interior, with its greater temperature, could
already host microbial life - but it’ll be a while before we can check
that (unless we get real lucky, and some alien cells get real unlucky,
with a cryovolcano eruption).  One thing’s for sure - the craft is only
on the sixth of forty-five planned flybys so we can expect to hear a
lot more about this real soon.

PS: Yes, it is ironic that we’re expecting Titanic lifeforms to be single celled.

Posted by Luke McKinney. Photo Credit: James Estrin/New York Times.

Related Galaxy posts:

“The Earth Strain” -Spreading Life To The Stars (whether we want to or not)
MIT Asks: How Would Extraterrestrial Astronomers Study Earth?
“The Great Silence” -A Galaxy Insight
Harvard-Smithsonian Scientists Zero In On Key Sign of Habitable Worlds
Cruising the Goldilocks Zone -The Search for Super Earths
Dead Zones in the Search for Extraterrestrial Life

  Non-Carbon Lifeforms -Why We May Overlook  

Source links:

Cassini flyby http://www.spaceref.com/news/viewpr.html?pid=16737
The Cassini Mission Home http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/cassini/main/index.html


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