New hope that alien life could thrive in oceans on Jupiter and Saturn's moons

Vector illustration. Planet Saturn with Moon
Could Saturn's moons hold alien life in icy subsurface oceans? (Getty) (Magnilion via Getty Images)

Could alien life forms lurk in the icy oceans of Jupiter and Saturn's moons such as Titan, Ganymede or Europa in our own solar system?

Nasa and others aim to find out, with planned robotic missions aiming to explore the frigid seas of the moons, and a new study has helped to pave the way for these missions.

Researchers from the University of Washington and the University of California, Berkeley have found that the likely habitats for alien life on the moons are much bigger than thought, due to the amount of liquid likely to be present.

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Baptiste Journaux, an acting assistant professor of Earth and space sciences at the UW, said: "The more a liquid is stable, the more promising it is for habitability.”

"Our results show that the cold, salty, high-pressure liquids found in the deep ocean of other planets' moons can remain liquid to much cooler temperature than they would at lower pressures.

“This extends the range of possible habitats on icy moons, and will allow us to pinpoint where we should look for biosignatures, or signs of life."

Jupiter and Saturn's icy moons — including Europa, Ganymede and Titan — are leading candidates within our solar system for hosting extraterrestrial life.

These ice-encrusted moons are thought to harbour enormous liquid oceans, up to several dozen times the volume of oceans on Earth.

Journaux said: "Despite its designation as the 'blue marble,' Earth is remarkably dry when compared to these worlds.”

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The oceans on these moons may contain various types of salts and are expected to range from about 100 miles deep, on Europa, to more than 400 miles deep, on Titan.

"We know that water supports life, but the major part of the oceans on these moons are likely below 0ºC and at pressures higher than anything experienced on Earth," Journaux said.

"We needed to know how cold an ocean can get before entirely freezing, including in its deepest abyss."

The study focused on eutectics, or the lowest temperature that a salty solution can remain liquid before entirely freezing.

The experiments used UC Berkeley equipment originally designed for the future cryopreservation of organs for medical applications and for food storage.

For this research, however, the authors used it to simulate the conditions thought to exist on other planets' moons.

Read more: Exoplanet twice the size of Earth ‘could be habitable’

Journaux, a planetary scientist and expert on the physics of water and minerals, worked with UC Berkeley engineers to test solutions of five different salts at pressures up to 3,000 times atmospheric pressure, or 300 megapascals — about three times the pressure in Earth's deepest ocean trench.

"Knowing the lowest temperature possible for salty water to remain a liquid at high pressures is integral to understanding how extraterrestrial life could exist and thrive in the deep oceans of these icy ocean worlds," said co-corresponding author Matthew Powell-Palm, who did the work as a postdoctoral researcher at UC Berkeley, also co-founder and CEO of the cryopreservation company BioChoric.

Journaux recently started working with Nasa's Dragonfly mission team, which will send a rotorcraft in 2027 to Saturn's largest moon, Titan.

Nasa also is leading the Europa Clipper mission in 2024 to explore Europa, one of the many moons orbiting Jupiter.

Meanwhile, the European Space Agency in 2023 will send its JUICE spacecraft, or Jupiter Icy Moons Explorer, to explore three of Jupiter's largest moons: Ganymede, Callisto and Europa.

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