The Saturnian moon Enceladus presents a unique opportunity in our Solar System to search for evidence of life, given its habitable ocean and plume that deposits organic-bearing ocean material onto the surface.
A paper led by Planetary Science Institute Senior Scientist Amanda R. Hendrix says that an ample supply of relatively pristine plume organics could be measured by instruments sent to Enceladus’ surface.
“We can learn a lot about potential biosignatures in Enceladus’ ocean by sending a mission to the surface of Enceladus. Previously, it was thought that in order to sample the freshest material from the Enceladus ocean, you have to fly through the plume and measure plume grains and gases. But now we know that you can land on the surface and be confident that your instruments can measure relatively pristine plume organics – sourced from the ocean,” said Hendrix, lead author of “Low effective ultraviolet exposure ages for organics at the surface of Enceladus” that appears in Communications Earth & Environment.
“We know that Enceladus’ ocean is habitable thanks to Cassini measurements. We know there is liquid water, energy, and the chemicals carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, phosphorus and sulfur. These are the ingredients necessary for life as we know it,” Hendrix said.
“Enceladus is an ocean world: it harbors a liquid ocean below an icy surface. There are at least several ocean worlds in our Solar System, but Enceladus is special because it is spraying its ocean material out into space via its south polar vapor-and-ice grain plume, which means that the instruments on the Cassini spacecraft were able to characterize the ocean as the spacecraft flew by and through the Enceladus plume,” Hendrix said. “Luckily, for this study, even though some of the plume grains are ejected out into the Saturnian system, close to 90 percent of the plume grains fall back onto the surface of the moon, which likely means that ocean material – including organics – is sitting right on the surface.”
Organic molecules found in the plume of Enceladus, include molecules like methane (CH4) and ethane (C2H6), along with more complex molecules.
Organics can be processed, or chemically transformed, by solar ultraviolet (UV) photons and by charged particles like electrons. But if we want to find out if any ocean-derived biosignatures are present in the plume grains, we need these grains to be as pristine, and unexposed to UV, as possible,” Hendrix said.