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stubeeef

macrumors 68030
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Aug 10, 2004
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Analyzing data from Cassini's recent Titan flybys, scientists at the Southwestern Research Institute (SwRI) in Texas and Washington State University announced last week that several of the key elements crucial for life on Earth are also present on Titan, including liquid reservoirs, organic molecules and ample energy sources.

Discovered in 1655 by a Dutch astronomer, Titan is the second largest moon in the solar system apart from Jupiter's Ganymede. Looking around, a person standing on Titan's surface would see rocky fields strewn with small ice pebbles. Gazing up, one would see clouds racing across the orange Titan sky as if on fast forward, because like Venus, Titan's atmosphere rotates much faster than its surface. Saturn and its magnificent rings would not be visible most of the time, due to the dense haze of orange smog that blankets the entire moon.

Scientists are interested in Titan because it reminds them of how Earth was billions of years before life existed. Titan is colder (-289 degrees Fahrenheit, or –178 Celsius) than primitive Earth was, but it has a dense nitrogen-rich atmosphere and a natural process for producing hydrogen and carbon containing molecules called hydrocarbons that are essential for life on Earth. Astronomers have long seen Titan as a place that had the preconditions for life, but most scientists saw it as too inhospitable to actually contain biology today.

The Sun's ultraviolet light reacts with nitrogen and methane high in the upper reaches of Titan's atmosphere, producing the orange smog and a steady stream of organic materials that fall steadily onto the moon's surface.

Many of the natural forces that shape the Earth's landscape are also active on Titan, including shifting continental plates, wind erosion, possibly oceans—albeit of ethane and methane and not water—and volcanoes. On Earth, these forces raise mountains and carve canyons, yet much of Titan's surface looks smooth, leading many scientists to suspect that the moon is relatively young.

If life does exist on Titan, a good place to look for it may be in hot springs connected to hydrocarbon reservoirs, said David Grinspoon, a researcher at SwRI's Space Science and Engineering Division.

Further fueling speculations about life on Titan are recent findings that microscopic organisms that live in extreme environments on Earth are hardier and capable of surviving in environments much harsher than anyone ever imagined.

One recently discovered species of so-called extremophiles could live in briny environments ten times saltier than seawater. Another species found in Yellowstone National Park could live off nothing but hydrogen, the most abundant element in the universe.

Perhaps most relevant for life on Titan, scientists have discovered within the past two decades several species of bacteria that thrive in freezing temperatures. Called psychrophiles, these organisms live in temperatures ranging from 23 to 68 degrees Fahrenheit (-5 to 20 degrees Celsius) and use methane to produce energy.

pretty cool :cool:
 

Mr. Anderson

Moderator emeritus
Nov 1, 2001
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stubeeef said:
pretty cool :cool:

true, but it might be a lot harder to find the life and we'll be lucky to get back there any time soon. I'd like to be around when they do, though.

It would be nuts if the life they did find was evolved beyond single cell life, though.

D
 

stubeeef

macrumors 68030
Original poster
Aug 10, 2004
2,708
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well with some of the bacteria here on earth that could survive on Titan, who knows what we would find. There is so much we don't know, that we don't know what we don't know (I love saying that).

Ya, not in our lifetime, maybe our grandkids' grandkids. Still facinating.
 

Jay42

macrumors 65816
Jul 14, 2005
1,416
588
I think its possible that they might discover something in the near future. Could be with that new telescope project being launched (forget details, someone could probably fill in).
 
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