type="text/css" />

Life on Titan? – Take Cover!

Posted by Science Oxford on April 16, 2010 | comments

This is an interesting article looking at how the differing chemistry of other planets will affect the life that can evolve on it. This research suggests any life on the moon Titan would likely be very strange, potentially explosive and very smelly.
Read on to find out more:

If life has evolved on Sat­urn’s frig­id moon, Ti­tan, it would be strange, smelly—and po­tent­ial­ly ex­plo­sive, new re­search sug­gests.

The con­clu­sions come from as­tro­bi­ol­o­gist Wil­liam Bains, who pre­s­ents his re­search at the Na­tional As­tron­o­my Meet­ing in Glas­gow, Scot­land on April 13.

“Hol­ly­wood would have prob­lems with these al­iens,” said Bains. “Beam one on­to the Star­ship En­ter­prise and it would boil and then burst in­to flames, and the fumes would kill eve­ry­one in range. Even a ti­ny whiff of its breath would smell un­be­lievably hor­ri­ble.

“But I think it is all the more in­ter­est­ing for that rea­son. Would­n’t it be sad if the most al­ien things we found in the gal­axy were just like us, but blue and with tail­s?” added Bains, re­fer­ring to the tall ex­tra­ter­res­tri­als from the mov­ie Av­a­tar.

Bains, whose re­search is car­ried out through Ru­fus Sci­en­tif­ic Ltd. in Cam­bridge, U.K. and the Mas­sachusetts In­sti­tute of Tech­nol­o­gy, is stu­dy­ing just how ex­treme life’s chem­is­try can be.

Life on Ti­tan, Sat­urn’s larg­est moon, is one of strang­er sce­nar­i­os un­der ex­amina­t­ion. Ti­tan is twice as large as our Moon and has a thick at­mos­phere of freez­ing, or­ange smog. At ten times our dis­tance from the Sun, it is a frig­id place, with a sur­face tem­per­a­ture of mi­nus 180 de­grees Cel­si­us (mi­nus 292 Fah­ren­heit). All the wa­ter is ice; the only liq­uids are meth­ane and eth­ane, fill­ing what sci­en­tists be­lieve are ponds and lakes.

“So, if life were to ex­ist on Ti­tan, it must have blood based on liq­uid meth­ane, not wa­ter. That means its whole chem­is­try is radic­ally dif­fer­ent. The mo­le­cules must be made of a wid­er va­ri­e­ty of el­e­ments than we use, but put to­geth­er in smaller molecules. It would al­so be much more chem­ic­ally re­ac­tive,” said Bains.

This blood would have to con­tain dis­solved chem­icals, but few chem­icals dis­solve easily in liq­uid meth­ane. Most mo­le­cules can’t dis­solve in it if they have more than six atoms not count­ing eas­ily-dis­solved hy­dro­gen. So a me­tab­o­lism run­ning in liq­uid meth­ane will have to be built of smaller mo­le­cules than in Earth bio­chem­is­try, which is typ­ic­ally built of mod­ules of around 10 atoms apart from hy­dro­gen.

You can only build around 3,400 dif­fer­ent mo­le­cules with­in the above-described lim­ita­t­ions on Ti­tan, Bains said. In con­trast, he added, one can build around 10 mil­lion or more dif­fer­ent mo­le­cules fit­ting Earth’s re­quired spe­cif­ica­t­ions, al­though only about 700 are ac­tu­ally used.

“The is­sue is not how many mo­le­cules you can make, but wheth­er you can make the col­lec­tion you need to as­sem­ble a me­tab­o­lism. It is like try­ing to find bits of wood in a lumber-yard to make a ta­ble. In the­o­ry you only need five. But you may have a lumber-yard full of off­cuts and still not find ex­actly the right five… so you need the po­ten­tial to make many more mo­le­cules than you ac­tu­ally need. Thus the six-atom chem­icals on Ti­tan would have to in­clude much more di­verse bond types [link­ing the atoms] and probably more di­verse el­e­ments, in­clud­ing sul­phur and phos­pho­rus.”

The el­e­ments would have to ap­pear in much more di­verse forms, as well as in forms that would be highly un­sta­ble on the Earth en­vi­ron­ment—hence the ex­plo­siveness, he added.

En­er­gy is anoth­er fac­tor that would af­fect the type of life that could evolve on Ti­tan. With sun­light a tenth of a per­cent as in­tense on Ti­tan’s sur­face as on the sur­face of Earth, en­er­gy is probably in short sup­ply. “Rapid move­ment or growth needs a lot of en­er­gy, so slow-growing, lichen-like or­gan­isms are pos­si­ble in the­o­ry, but ve­loci­rap­tors are pret­ty much ruled out,” said Bains.

Image Credit: © 2008 Karl Ko­foed

Visit this page »

What do you think?


RSS feed Twitter feed Newsletter