The icy crust at the south pole of Enceladus exhibits large fissures that allow water from the subsurface ocean to spray into space as geysers, forming a plume of icy particles. NASA’s Cassini spacecraft, which captured this imagery in 2009, sampled those particles to reveal the chemicals contained in the ocean. Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Space Science Institute
Phosphorus,
a key chemical element for many biological processes, has been found in icy
grains emitted by the small moon and is likely abundant in its subsurface
ocean.
Using data
collected by NASA’s Cassini mission, an international team of scientists has discovered
phosphorus – an essential chemical element for life – locked inside salt-rich
ice grains ejected into space from Enceladus.
The small moon is known to possess a subsurface ocean, and water from that ocean erupts through cracks in
Enceladus’ icy crust as geysers at its south pole, creating a plume. The plume then feeds Saturn’s E ring (a faint ring outside of the brighter main rings) with icy particles.
During its mission at the gas giant from
2004 to 2017, Cassini flew through the plume and E ring numerous times.
Scientists found that Enceladus’ ice grains contain a rich array of minerals
and organic compounds – including the ingredients for amino acids – associated with life as we know
it.
During a 2005 flyby, NASA’s Cassini spacecraft took high-resolution images of Enceladus that were combined into this mosaic, which shows the long fissures at the moon’s south pole that allow water from the subsurface ocean to escape into space. Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Space Science Institute
Phosphorus, the least abundant of the
essential elements necessary for biological processes, hadn’t been detected
until now. The element is a building block for DNA, which forms chromosomes and
carries genetic information, and is present in the bones of mammals, cell
membranes, and ocean-dwelling plankton. Phosphorus is also a fundamental part
of energy-carrying molecules present in all life on Earth. Life wouldn’t be
possible without it.
“We previously found that Enceladus’ ocean
is rich in a variety of organic compounds,” said Frank Postberg, a planetary
scientist at Freie Universität Berlin, Germany, who led the new study, published on Wednesday, June 14, in the journal
Nature. “But now, this new result reveals the clear chemical signature of
substantial amounts of phosphorus salts inside icy particles ejected into space
by the small moon’s plume. It’s the first time this essential element has been
discovered in an ocean beyond Earth.”
Previous analysis of Enceladus’ ice grains
revealed concentrations of sodium, potassium, chlorine, and
carbonate-containing compounds, and computer modeling suggested the subsurface
ocean is of moderate alkalinity – all factors that favor habitable
conditions.
Seen as a bright arc in this 2006 observation by Cassini, Saturn’s E ring is fed with icy particles from Enceladus’ plume, creating wispy fingers of bright material that is backlit by the Sun. The shadowed hemisphere of the moon can be seen as a dark dot inside the ring. Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Space Science Institute
Enceladus
and Beyond
For this latest study, the authors
accessed the data through NASA’s Planetary Data System, a long-term archive of digital data
products returned from the agency’s planetary missions. The archive is actively
managed by planetary scientists to help ensure its usefulness and usability by
the worldwide planetary science community.
The authors focused on data collected by
Cassini’s Cosmic Dust Analyzer instrument when it sampled icy
particles from Enceladus in Saturn’s E ring. Many more ice particles were
analyzed when Cassini flew through the E ring than when it went through just
the plume, so the scientists were able to examine a much larger number of compositional
signals there. By doing this, they discovered high concentrations of sodium
phosphates – molecules of chemically bound sodium, oxygen, hydrogen, and
phosphorus – inside some of those grains.
For image follow link: NASA Cassini Data Reveals Building Block for Life in Enceladus’ Ocean | NASA
NASA’s Eyes on the Solar
System visualization
tool lets you interact with Cassini during some of its key moments flying by
Enceladus. Scroll through to explore how the spacecraft discovered the moon’s subsurface
ocean and its icy plume. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech
Co-authors in Europe and Japan then
carried out laboratory experiments to show that Enceladus’ ocean has
phosphorus, bound inside different water-soluble forms of phosphate, in
concentrations of at least 100 times that of our planet’s oceans. Further
geochemical modeling by the team demonstrated that an abundance of phosphate
may also be possible in other icy ocean worlds in the outer solar system,
particularly those that formed from primordial ice containing carbon dioxide,
and where liquid water has easy access to rocks.
“High phosphate concentrations are a
result of interactions between carbonate-rich liquid water and rocky minerals
on Enceladus’ ocean floor and may also occur on a number of other ocean
worlds,” said co-investigator Christopher Glein, a planetary scientist and
geochemist at Southwest Research Institute in San Antonio, Texas. “This key ingredient
could be abundant enough to potentially support life in Enceladus’ ocean; this
is a stunning discovery for astrobiology.”
Although the science team is excited that
Enceladus has the building blocks for life, Glein stressed that life has not
been found on the moon – or anywhere else in the solar system beyond Earth:
“Having the ingredients is necessary, but they may not be sufficient for an
extraterrestrial environment to host life. Whether life could have originated
in Enceladus’ ocean remains an open question.”
Cassini’s mission came to an end in 2017, with the spacecraft burning up in
Saturn’s atmosphere, but the trove of data it collected will continue to be a
rich resource for decades to come. When it was launched, Cassini’s mission was
to explore Saturn, its rings, and moons. The flagship mission’s array of
instruments ended up making discoveries that continue to impact far more than
planetary science.
“This latest discovery of phosphorus in
Enceladus’ subsurface ocean has set the stage for what the habitability
potential might be for the other icy ocean worlds throughout the solar system,”
said Linda Spilker, Cassini’s project scientist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion
Laboratory in Southern California, who was not involved in the study. “Now that
we know so many of the ingredients for life are out there, the question
becomes: Is there life beyond Earth, perhaps in our own solar system? I feel
that Cassini’s enduring legacy will inspire future missions that might,
eventually, answer that very question.”
More
About the Mission
The Cassini-Huygens mission was a
cooperative project of NASA, ESA (European Space Agency), and the Italian Space
Agency. JPL, a division of Caltech in Pasadena, California, managed the mission
for NASA’s Science Mission Directorate in Washington. JPL designed, developed,
and assembled the Cassini orbiter.
For more information about Cassini, visit: http://www.nasa.gov/cassini and http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov
Source: NASA Cassini Data Reveals Building Block for Life in Enceladus’ Ocean | NASA
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