Paris, France:
Humanity may need look no further than our own Solar System in the
search for alien life, researchers probing one of Saturn's moons said
Tuesday.
The icy orb known as Enceladus may boast ideal living
conditions for single-celled microorganisms known as archaeans found in
some of the most extreme environments on Earth, they reported in the
science journal Nature Communications.
A
methanogenic (methane-producing) archaean called Methanothermococcus
okinawensis thrived in laboratory conditions mimicking those thought to
exist on Saturn's satellite, the team said.
On Earth, this type
of archaean is found at very hot temperatures near deep-sea hydrothermal
vents, and converts carbon dioxide and hydrogen gas into methane.
Traces of methane were previously detected in vapour emanating from cracks in Enceladus' surface.
"We
conclude that some of the CH4 (methane) detected in the plume of
Enceladus might, in principle, be produced by methanogens," the
researchers in Germany and Austria wrote.
They also calculated
that sufficient hydrogen to support such microbes could be produced by
geochemical processes in Enceladus' rocky core.
The authors had set out to test the hypothesis that conditions on the satellite may be good for hosting methanogenic archaea.
The
data, based purely on laboratory study, showed this "could be" so, said
Simon Rittmann of the University of Vienna who co-authored the
scientific paper.
But the results provide "no evidence for possible extraterrestrial life," he underlined to AFP.
"Our study only concerns microorganisms. I would like to avoid any speculation about intelligent life," he said.
Saturn is the sixth planet from the Sun, separated from Earth only by Mars and Jupiter.
It has dozens of moons.
Previous
research suggested that Enceladus sports an ocean of liquid water -- a
key ingredient for life -- beneath its icy surface.
The moon is
also thought to contain compounds such as methane, carbon dioxide, and
ammonia, and its south pole sports hydrothermal activity -- a
combination of traits that makes it a key target in the search for
extra-terrestrial life.
Further
research is needed to exclude the possibility that Enceladus' methane
may come from non-biological, geochemical processes, the authors said.