Saturn's moon could support life
By Kenneth Chang
NY TIMES NEWS SERVICE , NEW YORK
With newly discovered signs of liquid water, a moon of Saturn joins the small, highly select group of places in the solar system that could plausibly support life.
The moon, Enceladus, is only 400km wide, and planetary scientists expected that it would be nothing more than a frozen chunk of ice and rock. Instead, NASA's Cassini spacecraft has spotted eruptions of icy crystals, which hint at pockets of liquid water near the surface.
'It's startling,' said Dr. Carolyn Porco of the Space Science Institute in Boulder, Colorado, leader of the imaging team for Cassini. Nine scientific papers about Enceladus appeared in Friday's issue of the journal Science. 'I wouldn't be surprised see to the planetary community clamoring for a future exploratory expedition to land on the south polar terrain of Enceladus,' said Porco, lead author of one of the Science papers. 'We have found an environment that is potentially suitable for living organisms.'
Life requires at least three essential ingredients -- water, heat and carbon-based molecules -- and Enceladus may possess all three. As Cassini flew through the plumes of tiny ice crystals rising into space from the eruptions, it also detected simple carbon-based molecules like methane and carbon dioxide, which suggest more complicated carbon molecules might lie on the moon's surface.
The lack of a crater suggests that the heat is not the result of a meteor impact. Based on the initial observations, some scientists think that this warm region near the south pole may have somehow persisted for millions or billions of years, sufficient time for life to arise."
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NASA tweaked the trajectory of Cassini's July fly-by to pass within about 150km of Enceladus' surface. For the first time, the spacecraft got a look at the south pole, which turned out to be surprisingly smooth compared to the pockmarked northern hemisphere. And it was warm.
The expectation was that the temperature would be about -330? Fahrenheit. It turned out to be more than 100? warmer. "Which is fairly dramatic and blew us away when we first saw it," said John Spencer, a planetary scientist at the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder and a team member working with a Cassini instrument that measures infrared emissions. "It's a lot of heat to come out of such a tiny object."
Images of the moon also showed towering plumes of ice crystals coming off at high speed from the surface. The jets seem to originate from fissures near the south pole, Porco said.
Porco said their calculations eliminated the possibility that the particles were produced by warm vapor rising off warm ice at the surface. The best explanation, she said, is that pockets of liquid water exist under high pressure below a few tens of meters of ice. When the ice ruptures, the water shoots out and immediately freezes into ice crystals.
"We think we've got geysers," Porco said.
A small body like Enceladus would be unlikely to hold enough radioactive elements to produce continuing warmth. A more likely explanation is that the gravitational tugging on Enceladus by Saturn and another moon, Dione, squishes Enceladus, and that friction creates the heat. Another mystery is why the heat is concentrated around the south pole.
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