Life in The Outer Solar System
Life in The Outer Solar System
part 2:
Extraterrestrial Life
Galileo Galilei
Europa
1610!
Life on Europa?
Voyager 1 & 2
Galileo
Life on Europa?
Europa’s surface is smooth and young (no craters), and is covered with
cracks:
Europa is heated by tidal forces from nearby massive Jupiter and has
forced orbital eccentricity of 0.0094 from the gravitational interactions
with the other Galilean moons:
2 models of Europa’s
interior:
Cycloidal features (“flexi”) near Europa’s south pole. These cycloidal cracks form in
Europa's solid-ice surface with the daily rise and fall of tides in the subsurface ocean
(Gregory V. Hoppa, Randall Tufts, Richard Greenberg and Paul Geissler of the Luna
and Planetary Laboratory, University of Arizona). This image shows what appears to be
the most convincing evidence yet for a global ocean under Europa's icy crust.
Europa:
Reasons why Europa is so interesting:
Chaotic features seen in many images of Europa's icy surface are probably created
by Europa's tides, and are believed to be evidence of melt-through needed for
exposing the oceans. The mixing of substances needed to support primative life
may be driven by the tides on Europa, with maximum heights of 500 meters
(much larger than Earth tides). Circulation of liquid water through cracks
produced by tidal forces could bring salts and organic compounds dissolved in
the water up to Europa's surface. This circulation also brings biologically useful
chemicals, such as formaldehyde (as well as organic compounds dumped on
Europa's surface by cometary impacts) down to the subsurface ocean. Other
chemicals, formed by radiation near the surface, such as sulfur, hydrogen
peroxide, and free oxygen, would also provide primative life with sources of
energy and nutrients. Hydrothermal vents would produce organic compounds
(seen as dark material coloring cracks?) and provide a heat source. Undersea
volcanism could also lead to large melt-throughs, and tidal heat, created by
internal friction could also melt the ice. The melted-through ice provides light
and surface chemicals to the oceans. Any creatures inhabiting these oceans
could use photosynthesis for energy.
The question
really is: is
the ice thin or
thick?
Tides and
undersea
volcanoes
could play a
role too!
Europa: