http://www.spaceflightnow.com/cassini/050906enceladus.html

Tiny Enceladus may hold ingredients of life

UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA NEWS RELEASE

Posted: September 6, 2005


Saturn's tiny moon Enceladus is "absolutely" a highlight of the Cassini
mission and should be targeted in future searches for life, said Robert H.
Brown of The University of Arizona, leader of the Cassini visual and
infrared mapping spectrometer team.

Brown and other Cassini scientists attended a meeting in London last week
and are at the 37th annual Division of Planetary Sciences meeting at
Cambridge University this week.

"Enceladus is without a doubt one of the most spectacular things Cassini
has seen," Brown said in a phone interview Thursday. "It's one of the
biggest puzzles. It'll be a long time before anyone comes up with a good
explanation of how Enceladus does what it does, and for a scientist,
that's pure, unmitigated fun. Solving the biggest puzzles is the thrilling
part of doing science."

Scientists got their first glimpse of Enceladus's geology when Voyager 2
flew by the icy bright satellite in August 1981. They were completely
baffled. Voyager photographed areas of young, smooth terrain that told
them that the moon must have been geologically active as late as 100
million years ago.

But nothing explained how tiny Enceladus - only 314 miles across - could
get hot enough to melt. It seemingly doesn't have enough interior rocks
for radioactive heating, an eccentric enough orbit for tidal heating, or
enough ammonia to lower its melting temperature. After Voyager,
researchers shelved Enceladus as an unsolvable problem for a while.

This year, Cassini turned its more powerful cameras and instruments on
Enceladus during Feb. 17, March 9 and July 14 flybys. Results have stunned
and delighted.

The diminutive moon turns out to have a primarily water vapor atmosphere
tinged with nitrogen, carbon dioxide and other simple carbon-based
molecules (organics) concentrated at its south pole. Its south pole is a
hotspot, hovering at a relatively balmy minus -183 degrees Celsius
compared to the expected temperature of -203 degrees Celsius.

Enceladus's south pole is a hotbed of geological action. The south pole
region is cut by parallel cracks roughly 81 miles long and 25 miles apart.
The cracks, dubbed "tiger stripes," vent vapor and fine ice water
particles that have crystallized on Enceladus's surface as recently as
1,000 years to 10 years ago. The fine ice material is probably the major
source of particles that replenish Saturn's outermost ring, its E ring.

"The kind of geophysical activity we see is quite likely being driven by
liquid water below the surface," Brown said. Cassini hasn't seen ice
geysers or ice volcanoes, but the lack of ammonia, and the sheer volume of
water vapor escaping suggests there's pure-water volcanism on Enceladus,
he added.

"We detected simple organics in the tiger stripes," Brown said. The simple
organics include carbon dioxide and hydrogen-and-carbon-containing
molecules like methane, ethane and ethylene. "Methane (basically natural
gas) has probably been locked up inside Enceladus since the solar system
formed and is now bubbling up through the vents."

The visual and infrared mapping spectrometer can't detect nitrogen, but
Cassini's ion neutral mass spectrometer may have found nitrogen in
Enceladus's atmosphere. All other results from these two very different
instruments are entirely consistent, which gives Cassini mission
scientists confidence in their results, Brown said.

"So you've got subsurface liquid water, simple organics and water vapor
welling up from below. Over time - and Enceladus has been around 4.5
billion years, just like Earth and the rest of the solar system - heating
a cocktail of simple organics, water and nitrogen could form some of the
most basic building blocks of life," Brown said. "Whether that's happened
at Enceladus is not clear, but Enceladus, much like Jupiter's moon Europa
and the planet Mars, now has to be a place where we eventually search for
life."

The $3.2 billion Cassini-Huygens mission is a joint venture between the
NASA, the European Space Agency and the Italian Space Agency. The Jet
Propulsion Laboratory, a division of the California Institute of
Technology in Pasadena, manages the mission for NASA's Science Mission
Directorate, Washington.



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