When it descends through the thick golden haze on Saturn’s moon Titan, NASA’s Dragonfly rotorcraft will find eerily familiar terrain. Dunes wrap around Titan’s equator. Clouds drift across its skies. Rain drizzles. Rivers flow, forming canyons, lakes and seas.
Artist's concept of NASA's Dragonfly on the surface of
Saturn's moon Titan. The car-sized rotorcraft will be equipped to characterize
the habitability of Titan's environment, investigate the progression of
prebiotic chemistry in an environment where carbon-rich material and liquid
water may have mixed for an extended period, and even search for chemical
indications of whether water-based or hydrocarbon-based life once existed on
Titan.
NASA/Johns Hopkins APL/Steve Gribben
But not everything is as familiar as it seems. At minus 292 degrees
Fahrenheit, the dune sands aren’t silicate grains but organic material. The
rivers, lakes and seas hold liquid methane and ethane, not water. Titan is a
frigid world laden with organic molecules.
Yet Dragonfly, a car-sized
rotorcraft set to launch no earlier than 2028, will explore this frigid world
to potentially answer one of science’s biggest questions: How did life begin?
Seeking answers about life in a
place where it likely can’t survive seems odd. But that’s precisely the point.
“Dragonfly isn’t a mission to
detect life — it’s a mission to investigate the chemistry that came before
biology here on Earth,” said Zibi Turtle, principal investigator for Dragonfly
and a planetary scientist at the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory in
Laurel, Maryland. “On Titan, we can explore the chemical processes that may
have led to life on Earth without life complicating the picture.”
On Earth, life has reshaped nearly
everything, burying its chemical forebears beneath eons of evolution. Even
today’s microbes rely on a slew of reactions to keep squirming.
“You need to have gone from simple
to complex chemistry before jumping to biology, but we don’t know all the
steps,” Turtle said. “Titan allows us to uncover some of them.”
Titan is an untouched chemical
laboratory where all the ingredients for known life — organics, liquid water
and an energy source — have interacted in the past. What Dragonfly uncovers
will illuminate a past since erased on Earth and refine our understanding of
habitability and whether the chemistry that sparked life here is a universal
rule — or a wonderous cosmic fluke.
Before NASA’s Cassini-Huygens
mission, researchers
didn't know just how rich Titan is in organic molecules. The mission’s data,
combined with laboratory experiments, revealed a molecular smorgasbord —
ethane, propane, acetylene, acetone, vinyl cyanide, benzene, cyanogen, and
more.
These molecules fall to the
surface, forming thick deposits on Titan’s ice bedrock. Scientists believe
life-related chemistry could start there — if given some liquid water, such as
from an asteroid impact.
Enter Selk crater, a 50-mile-wide
impact site. It’s a key Dragonfly destination, not only because it’s covered in
organics, but because it may have had liquid water for an extended time.
Selk crater, a 50-mile-wide impact site highlighted on
this infrared image of Titan, is a key Dragonfly destination. Landing near
Selk, Dragonfly will explore various sites, analyzing the surface chemistry to
investigate the frozen remains of what could have been prebiotic chemistry in
action.
NASA/JPL-Caltech/University of Nantes/University of
Arizona
The impact that formed Selk melted the icy bedrock, creating a temporary
pool that could have remained liquid for hundreds to thousands of years under
an insulating ice layer, like winter ponds on Earth. If a natural antifreeze
like ammonia were mixed in, the pool could have remained unfrozen even longer,
blending water with organics and the impactor’s silicon, phosphorus, sulfur and
iron to form a primordial soup.
“It’s essentially a long-running
chemical experiment,” said Sarah Hörst, an atmospheric chemist at Johns Hopkins
University and co-investigator on Dragonfly’s science team. “That’s why Titan
is exciting. It’s a natural version of our origin-of-life experiments — except
it’s been running much longer and on a planetary scale.”
For decades, scientists have
simulated Earth’s early conditions, mixing water with simple organics to create
a “prebiotic soup” and jumpstarting reactions with an electrical shock. The
problem is time. Most tests last weeks, maybe months or years.
The melt pools at Selk crater,
however, possibly lasted tens of thousands of years. Still shorter than the
hundreds of millions of years it took life to emerge on Earth, but potentially
enough time for critical chemistry to occur.
“We don’t know if Earth life took
so long because conditions had to stabilize or because the chemistry itself
needed time,” Hörst said. “But models show that if you toss Titan’s organics
into water, tens of thousands of years is plenty of time for chemistry to
happen.”
Dragonfly will test that theory.
Landing near Selk, it will fly from site to site, analyzing the surface
chemistry to investigate the frozen remains of what could have been prebiotic
chemistry in action.
Morgan Cable, a research scientist
at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California and co-investigator
on Dragonfly, is particularly excited about the Dragonfly Mass Spectrometer
(DraMS) instrument. Developed by NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in
Greenbelt, Maryland, with a key subsystem provided by the CNES (Centre National
d'Etudes Spatiales), DraMS will search for indicators of complex chemistry.
“We’re not looking for exact
molecules, but patterns that suggest complexity,” Cable said. On Earth, for
example, amino acids — fundamental to proteins — appear in specific patterns. A
world without life would mainly manufacture the simplest amino acids and form
fewer complex ones.
Generally, Titan isn’t regarded as
habitable; it’s too cold for the chemistry of life as we know it to occur, and
there’s is no liquid water on the surface, where the organics and likely energy
sources exist.
Still, scientists have assumed that
if a place has life’s ingredients and enough time, complex chemistry — and
eventually life — should emerge. If Titan proves otherwise, it may
mean we’ve misunderstood something about life’s start and it may be rarer than
we thought.
“We won’t know how easy or
difficult it is for these chemical steps to occur if we don’t go, so we need to
go and look,” Cable said. “That’s the fun thing about going to a world like
Titan. We’re like detectives with our magnifying glasses, looking at everything
and wondering what this is.”
Dragonfly is being designed and
built under the direction of the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory
(APL), which manages the mission for NASA. The team includes key partners at
NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center and NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
Dragonfly is managed by NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville,
Alabama, for the agency’s Science Mission Directorate at NASA Headquarters in
Washington.
For more information on Dragonfly,
visit: https://science.nasa.gov/mission/dragonfly/
By Jeremy Rehm
Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory, Laurel, Md.
Source: NASA’s Dragonfly Mission Sets Sights on Titan’s Mysteries - NASA Science
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