Skip to main content

Cornell University research finds life could exist on Saturn’s moon Titan

Despite its seemingly inhospitable climate, life could exist on Saturn’s moon Titan, according to research by scientists at Cornell University.

With an average temperature of -290 F, Titan has plenty of water ice but hardly any water vapor, due to water’s very low vapor pressure. That means any life that might exist would have to be non-water based — that is, unlike any life on Earth.

Still, Earth and Titan have important traits in common. “Titan is the only other place in the solar system, aside from Earth — with the possible exception of Mars — where there are flowing liquids on the surface,” Martin Rahm, research associate at Cornell University and lead author of the study, tells Digital Trends. These liquids fall as rain and affect geology through erosion. Rahm adds: “There are sources of energy — sunlight, cosmic rays — and organic molecules, hence Titan is of keen interest for studying prebiotic processes.”

Titan’s flowing liquids are composed of such things as methane and ethane, rather than water, and its atmosphere is full of hydrogen cyanide (HCN), which the researchers recognize as a molecule believed to be key in prebiotic — existing or occurring before the emergence of life — reactions that eventually led to life on Earth.

Though HCN is plentiful in the atmosphere, it seems to convert to a different compound on the moon’s surface. “Such transformative chemistry is proceeding despite the fact that it is extremely cold on Titan, which is maybe the most profound difference compared to Earth,” Rahm says. “If life could exist there, it would need to function very differently from ‘life as we know it,’ and offer clues to the limitations of life in the universe.”

Along with Jonathan I. Lunine, director of the Cornell Center for Astrophysics and Planetary Science, Rahm and the team ran data collected by the Cassini-Huygens mission through density functional theory — a quantum mechanical modeling method — to predict various compounds that could be made from HCN, and to calculate some of these compounds’ properties. In the end, the calculations suggested that the prebiotic reactions were possible and the resulting chemical structures were capable of functions like light absorption.

“We should stress that this paper does not predict life on the surface of Titan,” Rahm says. “Rather, we provide data in support of an environment that might support prebiotic chemistry, to some extent.

“Finding the limits and possible origins of life is a fundamental challenge, and there are many paths to explore,” Rahm continues. “It has proven very difficult to synthesize well-characterized materials from HCN on Earth, needed to study this chemistry.”

Moving forward, the Cornell team hope to run simulations of these systems evolving over time, while investigating their reactions at various temperatures and expanding their study to examine even more complicated chemistries. In the end, they hope to conduct experiments on Earth that are modeled off of Titan’s chemistry to give an even more detailed description of the moon’s potential for life.

Dyllan Furness
Dyllan Furness is a freelance writer from Florida. He covers strange science and emerging tech for Digital Trends, focusing…
Researchers create lunar life support system by baking moon dust
Artist impression of a Moon Base concept, with solar arrays for energy generation, greenhouses for food production, and habitats shielded with regolith.

For future missions to the moon -- especially if we want to send a crew there for a significant period of time -- we'll need to find a way to provide for essential needs. Bringing a whole lot of water and oxygen along on a rocket isn't practical because it's so heavy, so a different approach aims to make use of the resources available on the moon to create what's needed.

Now, future lunar explorers may be able to create water and oxygen from moon dust, using research from the European Space Agency (ESA) and others. A team has found a way to produce both water and oxygen by baking dusty lunar soil, which is called regolith.

Read more
Researchers have simulated a virtual universe, and you can download it for free
The Uchuu simulation, the most detailed simulation of the universe to date.

If you've ever wanted to explore the entire universe from the comfort of your computer, now's your chance. An international team has created the largest and most realistic virtual universe to date called Uchuu (which means "outer space" in Japanese), simulating 2.1 trillion particles in a computational cube which is a mind-bending 9.63 billion light-years wide on each side.

世界最大規模の”模擬宇宙”を公開 ~ 宇宙の大規模構造と銀河形成の解明に向けて ~

Read more
To find evidence of life on Mars, we should look to its moon Phobos
An image of Phobos from March 23, 2008, taken by the High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment camera on NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter.

An image of Phobos from March 23, 2008, taken by the High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment camera on NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter. NASA/JPL-Caltech/University of Arizona

In the search for evidence that there was once life on Mars, most current research focuses on the surface of the planet, like the work that NASA's Perseverance rover is currently doing. But a new study by researchers from the Japanese space agency (JAXA) suggests that there's another location we should be searching for ancient preserved microorganisms: Mars's moon Phobos.

Read more