Science time:
Even though this site is mostly for political science, at times
I feel the need to observe scientific events. This article looks at the possibility
that we may not be alone in the universe. Any life from this moon will not be intelligent and probably very
primitive. But it would show that we are not alone in the Universe.
-Steve Otto
From News Univercity of Arizona:
An
unknown methane-producing process is likely at work in the hidden ocean beneath
the icy shell of Saturn's moon Enceladus, suggests a new study published in Nature
Astronomy by scientists at the University of Arizona and Paris Sciences &
Lettres University.
Giant
water plumes erupting from Enceladus have long fascinated scientists and the
public alike, inspiring research and speculation about the vast ocean that is
believed to be sandwiched between the moon's rocky core and its icy shell.
Flying through the plumes and sampling their chemical makeup, the Cassini
spacecraft detected a relatively high concentration of certain molecules
associated with hydrothermal vents on the bottom of Earth's oceans,
specifically dihydrogen, methane and carbon dioxide. The amount of methane
found in the plumes was particularly unexpected.
"We
wanted to know: Could Earthlike microbes that 'eat' the dihydrogen and produce
methane explain the surprisingly large amount of methane detected by
Cassini?" said Régis Ferrière, an
associate professor in the University of Arizona Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology and
one of the study's two lead authors. "Searching for such microbes, known
as methanogens, at Enceladus' seafloor would require extremely challenging
deep-dive missions that are not in sight for several decades."
Ferrière
and his team took a different, easier route: They constructed mathematical
models to calculate the probability that different processes, including
biological methanogenesis, might explain the Cassini data.
The
authors applied new mathematical models that combine geochemistry and microbial
ecology to analyze Cassini plume data and model the possible processes that
would best explain the observations. They conclude that Cassini's data are
consistent either with microbial hydrothermal vent activity, or with processes
that don't involve life forms but are different from the ones known to occur on
Earth.
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