Spazio: ultima frontiera. Credere che si sia soli nell'universo è come credere che la Terra sia piatta. Come disse l'astrofisico Labeque al palazzo dell'UNESCO, durante il congresso mondiale del SETI di Parigi del Settembre 2008, " SOMETHING IS HERE", "Qualcosa è qui", e I TEMPI SONO MATURI per farsene una ragione. La CIA, l'FBI, la NSA, il Pentagono, e non solo, lo hanno confermato!
Statistiche
Wednesday, October 2, 2019
Ingredients for Life?
Europa could have the essential ingredients needed for life:
Water is at the top of the list of ingredients that make life
possible. It dissolves nutrients for organisms to eat, transports
important chemicals within living cells, and allows those cells to get
rid of waste. Data indicates Europa may have plenty of water – a salty
ocean beneath its crust that contains more water than Earth's ocean.
Scientists also think there's a rocky seafloor at the bottom of the
ocean. The interaction between the ocean and the rocks could possibly
supply chemical nutrients for living organisms.
The best evidence that there's an ocean on Europa was gathered by
NASA's Galileo spacecraft, which orbited Jupiter from 1995 to 2003. The
spacecraft made 12 close flybys of Europa and one of its instruments, a
magnetometer, detected that a magnetic field was being created within
Europa as Jupiter's powerful magnetic field swept past the moon.
Scientists think the most likely thing that could create this magnetic
signature is a global ocean of salty water.
Europa's surface also shows signs it could have an ocean beneath it.
Images from Galileo and other spacecraft show that the surface doesn't
have many craters from meteorite impacts like other moons in the solar
system. Scientists think geologic activity, like warmer ice rising from
below, could be erasing the craters over time.
Europa's bright, icy surface is a landscape unlike anything seen on
Earth. To start with, in an overall sense, it's quite smooth, with no
towering mountains, and no deep basins or chasms. Myriad ridges and
grooves crisscross the surface, breaking up the landscape. Many of these
features coincide with long, curving streaks that are dark and reddish
in color – some stretching across the surface in great arcs over 600
miles (1000 kilometers) long. Elsewhere, domes, pits and chaotic jumbles
of icy blocks hint that warm ice may be rising from deep below.
Models suggest that Europa's icy shell is relatively thin. The icy
moon gets stretched and released by the tug of Jupiter's gravity, in an
endless cycle, as Europa orbits the giant planet. This squeezing in and
out is a process called tidal flexing, which may be creating heat inside
Europa; the warmed ice from this heat may be pushing the surface upward
to create the ridges.
The tidal flexing also may be creating enough heat inside Europa to
maintain a liquid ocean beneath the moon's icy surface. Most of the heat
would be focused at the boundary between the ocean and the icy crust.
For Europa to be potentially habitable, it would need to have the
essential chemical ingredients for the chemistry of life. These include
carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, phosphorus and sulfur, which are
common elements, and scientists think it's likely they were present on
Europa as it formed. Later on, asteroids and comets impacted the moon
and would have deposited even more organic, or carbon containing,
materials.
The chemical elements for life might be found within Europa's icy
shell, as well as its ocean. Tidal heating could be powering a system
that cycles water and nutrients between the moon's rocky interior, ice
shell and ocean, creating a watery environment rich with chemistry
conducive to life.
This is why studying Europa's chemistry – on the surface and within
the suspected ocean – is important for understanding its habitability,
because living things extract energy from their environments by chemical
reactions.
All lifeforms need energy to survive. Where would life on an icy
world far from the Sun get energy? The type of life that might inhabit
Europa likely would not be powered by photosynthesis – but by chemical
reactions.
Europa's surface is blasted by radiation from Jupiter. That's a bad
thing for life on the surface – it couldn't survive. But the radiation
may create fuel for life in an ocean below the surface.
The radiation splits apart water molecules (H2O, made of oxygen and
hydrogen) in Europa's extremely tenuous atmosphere. The hydrogen floats
away and the oxygen stays behind. Oxygen is a very reactive element, and
potentially could be used in chemical reactions that release energy,
which lifeforms could exploit. If the oxygen somehow make its way to the
ocean, it could possibly provide chemical energy for microbial life.
If Europa does have a salty ocean, chemical reactions between the
water and the rocks on the ocean floor could create hydrogen-rich
materials. And if there are areas where the ocean interacts with hot
rock, then, like hydrothermal vents in Earth's oceans, that water could
be pouring out chemical nutrients to power life. In short, Europa may
have a variety of processes that work together to make the chemical
energy available for powering life processes of simple organisms like
bacteria.
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