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🏆 James Webb telescope finds potential signature of life on Jupiter's icy moon Europa

Hamartia Antidote

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James Webb spots Dave Bowman on Europa.
Bowman.png


The discovery of seemingly home-grown carbon dioxide suggests Europa's ice-covered ocean could be habitable.

Highly stylized view of Jupiter's icy moon Europa.

A false-color image of Jupiter’s moon Europa taken by NASA’s JunoCam in Sept. 2022. (Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/SwRI/MSSS Image processing by Kevin M. Gill / Fernando Garcia Navarro CC BY 2.0)
NASA's James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) has revealed homemade carbon dioxide on Jupiter's icy moon Europa, raising the possibility that the frigid waterworld could host life.


Europa, which is a little bit smaller than Earth's moon, is covered with a crust of water ice enveloping a saltwater ocean. The presence of liquid water makes Europa an intriguing object of exploration for scientists interested in extraterrestrial life. But until now, no one had shown that the ocean contained the proper molecules, particularly carbon, which is a fundamental building block of life on Earth.

The new detection by JWST is intriguing because the carbon dioxide does not seem to have been carried by a meteorite or asteroid, and it appears in a geologically young region of the moon called Tara Regio, suggesting the gas may have formed within the moon itself.

"Previous observations from the Hubble Space Telescope show evidence for ocean-derived salt in Tara Regio," Cornell University planetary scientist Samantha Trumbo said in a statement. "Now we’re seeing that carbon dioxide is heavily concentrated there as well. We think this implies that the carbon probably has its ultimate origin in the internal ocean."

Trumbo is the lead author of one of two papers on the new Europa observations published in the journal Science on Sept. 21. Thanks to JWST’s power, researchers needed only minutes of the observatory's time to discern new details about Europa, Heidi Hammel of the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy said in the statement.

The researchers found signs of both crystalline and amorphous carbon dioxide on Europa. ("Amorphous" refers to a disorganized molecular form, as compared with the rigid patterns of crystals.) They saw high concentrations in what astronomers call "chaos regions," where the surface crust has been disrupted and there is likely movement of materials between the crust and interior ocean. Because carbon dioxide doesn't stay stable for long on Europa's surface, the researchers believe that the carbon came up from the ocean relatively recently. Europa's surface is, on average, around 60 million years old, as estimated by the few craters pockmarking the ice, according to 2022 research. The chaos terrain is generally younger than average.

Scientists are planning two missions to Europa in the upcoming years. NASA's Clipper mission, expected to launch in 2024, will provide observations of the moon from orbit, with a focus on searching for molecules and conditions conducive to life. Meanwhile, the European Space Agency launched the Jupiter Icy Moons Explorer (JUICE) spacecraft in April; it will arrive at the gas giant in 2031. That craft will conduct 35 flybys of the three moons Europa, Ganymede, and Callisto.
 
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Somehow, I am less impressed by CO2 compared to when NASA discovered Amino acid glycine in a comet:

Amino acids are telltale evidence of life as it is just a hop skip and jump to go from amino acids to proteins.

Also, biological molecules have been detected outside solar system:
 
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Too early to get exited. But Europa has been a potential life bearing body since Arthur C Clark SF days
 
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Hydrothermal vent/volcano also emit carbon dioxide from carbonate rock through heat or acid reaction.
 
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Hydrothermal vent/volcano also emit carbon dioxide from carbonate rock through heat or acid reaction.

Yes, and in the presence of water that is conducive to life forming. They aren't saying the life is creating the carbon dioxide. They are saying water, thermal vents, and carbon dioxide make the chances of finding life on Europa a great possibility.


The process creates mineral-rich chimneys with alkaline and acidic fluids, providing a source of energy that facilitates chemical reactions between hydrogen and carbon dioxide to form increasingly complex organic compounds.
 
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Water is the essential building block. without water, there wont be any life form, or if another life form exists like Jinn made of smokeless fire.

Surah Jinn,

وَالْجَانَّ خَلَقْنَاهُ مِن قَبْلُ مِن نَّارِ السَّمُومِ﴿27﴾


And We created the jinn earlier, out of a piercing fire. 3
 
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Water is the essential building block. without water, there wont be any life form, or if another life form exists like Jinn made of smokeless fire.

Surah Jinn,

وَالْجَانَّ خَلَقْنَاهُ مِن قَبْلُ مِن نَّارِ السَّمُومِ﴿27﴾


And We created the jinn earlier, out of a piercing fire. 3

There's a lot of water on Europa.

Europa's surface composition is mostly water ice. Thermal models dating back to 1971 also suggested that the interior of Europa could contain a layer of liquid water.

Add thermal vents and sources of carbon dioxide and there is a good chance of life forming.

Europa is now even higher on the list of places to send probes. Imagine the crazy sh*t they may find if it exists.
 
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