NASA Cassini Data Reveals Building Block for Life in Enceladus’ Ocean

Using data collected by NASA’s Cassini mission, an international team of scientists has discovered phosphorus – an essential chemical element for life – locked inside salt-rich ice grains ejected into space from Saturn’s moon Enceladus.

Key points

  • The small moon is known to possess a subsurface ocean, and water from that ocean erupts through cracks in Enceladus’ icy crust as geysers at its south pole, creating a plume.
  • The plume then feeds Saturn’s E ring (a faint ring outside of the brighter main rings) with icy particles.
  • Scientists found that Enceladus’ ice grains contain a rich array of minerals and organic compounds – including the ingredients for amino acids – associated with life as we know it.
  • Phosphorus, the least abundant of the essential elements necessary for biological processes, hadn’t been detected until now.
  • The element is a building block for DNA, which forms chromosomes and carries genetic information, and is present in the bones of mammals, cell membranes, and ocean-dwelling plankton.
  • Phosphorus is also a fundamental part of energy-carrying molecules present in all life on Earth. Life wouldn’t be possible without it.

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