Berliner Boersenzeitung - Life on 'Death Star'? Saturn moon Mimas has hidden ocean

EUR -
AED 4.264418
AFN 80.109433
ALL 97.118356
AMD 445.339844
ANG 2.077856
AOA 1064.644276
ARS 1533.975954
AUD 1.782246
AWG 2.089815
AZN 1.977146
BAM 1.950363
BBD 2.345223
BDT 141.116612
BGN 1.956137
BHD 0.437647
BIF 3424.975012
BMD 1.161008
BND 1.492378
BOB 8.054754
BRL 6.324248
BSD 1.161477
BTN 101.799722
BWP 15.627838
BYN 3.824936
BYR 22755.76618
BZD 2.333156
CAD 1.599968
CDF 3355.314944
CHF 0.943325
CLF 0.028691
CLP 1125.620912
CNY 8.345561
CNH 8.35356
COP 4677.70316
CRC 587.370188
CUC 1.161008
CUP 30.766725
CVE 110.73117
CZK 24.474757
DJF 206.334472
DKK 7.463567
DOP 70.944064
DZD 150.999548
EGP 56.298116
ERN 17.415127
ETB 162.018969
FJD 2.619698
FKP 0.863309
GBP 0.864469
GEL 3.131749
GGP 0.863309
GHS 12.219615
GIP 0.863309
GMD 84.175527
GNF 10071.748491
GTQ 8.911388
GYD 242.949013
HKD 9.113876
HNL 30.465073
HRK 7.534366
HTG 152.097964
HUF 395.926925
IDR 18925.425058
ILS 3.964043
IMP 0.863309
INR 101.739754
IQD 1521.597589
IRR 48907.481873
ISK 142.79234
JEP 0.863309
JMD 185.961598
JOD 0.823168
JPY 171.841448
KES 150.346723
KGS 101.505
KHR 4652.160551
KMF 492.412706
KPW 1044.907751
KRW 1616.855234
KWD 0.354978
KYD 0.967927
KZT 631.062541
LAK 25077.782801
LBP 103968.309236
LKR 349.320718
LRD 233.94958
LSL 20.619266
LTL 3.428156
LVL 0.702283
LYD 6.298505
MAD 10.518161
MDL 19.478204
MGA 5149.0729
MKD 61.368923
MMK 2437.279889
MNT 4172.278399
MOP 9.391662
MRU 46.317561
MUR 52.686927
MVR 17.887229
MWK 2016.076298
MXN 21.673752
MYR 4.915124
MZN 74.257814
NAD 20.619848
NGN 1780.963349
NIO 42.740852
NOK 11.880524
NPR 162.876058
NZD 1.955679
OMR 0.446336
PAB 1.161492
PEN 4.097193
PGK 4.815169
PHP 66.33596
PKR 329.726733
PLN 4.2589
PYG 8699.747877
QAR 4.226652
RON 5.065826
RSD 117.138422
RUB 92.300547
RWF 1676.496243
SAR 4.357052
SBD 9.555787
SCR 16.91619
SDG 697.188494
SEK 11.19027
SGD 1.494206
SHP 0.91237
SLE 26.877113
SLL 24345.771874
SOS 663.506526
SRD 43.432893
STD 24030.53144
STN 24.787531
SVC 10.162713
SYP 15095.16706
SZL 20.619108
THB 37.693882
TJS 10.819418
TMT 4.07514
TND 3.352122
TOP 2.719203
TRY 47.257939
TTD 7.883228
TWD 34.800108
TZS 2919.935879
UAH 48.163166
UGX 4138.463284
USD 1.161008
UYU 46.520316
UZS 14656.571491
VES 152.045925
VND 30456.735419
VUV 138.625746
WST 3.08122
XAF 654.15034
XAG 0.03072
XAU 0.000346
XCD 3.137683
XCG 2.093337
XDR 0.813218
XOF 653.070062
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.961288
ZAR 20.602781
ZMK 10450.462448
ZMW 27.005415
ZWL 373.844256
  • RBGPF

    4.1600

    76

    +5.47%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0100

    14.34

    -0.07%

  • CMSD

    -0.0090

    23.571

    -0.04%

  • RIO

    0.2800

    62.14

    +0.45%

  • CMSC

    0.0100

    23.06

    +0.04%

  • NGG

    0.2200

    71.23

    +0.31%

  • BTI

    1.0900

    58.33

    +1.87%

  • GSK

    -0.0900

    37.71

    -0.24%

  • SCS

    0.0800

    15.96

    +0.5%

  • SCU

    0.0000

    12.72

    0%

  • BCC

    -1.3500

    80.74

    -1.67%

  • RELX

    0.0400

    48.04

    +0.08%

  • JRI

    -0.0450

    13.39

    -0.34%

  • AZN

    0.5350

    74.07

    +0.72%

  • BP

    -0.1900

    33.95

    -0.56%

  • VOD

    0.1500

    11.51

    +1.3%

  • BCE

    0.0000

    24.35

    0%

Life on 'Death Star'? Saturn moon Mimas has hidden ocean
Life on 'Death Star'? Saturn moon Mimas has hidden ocean / Photo: Frederic Durillon - Animea Studio | Observatoire de Paris - PSL, IMCCE/AFP

Life on 'Death Star'? Saturn moon Mimas has hidden ocean

Saturn's small moon Mimas seems an unlikely suspect in the hunt for life in Earth's backyard -- it is probably best known for looking like the "Death Star" in the Star Wars films.

Text size:

But scientists said on Wednesday that underneath the unassuming moon's icy shell is a vast hidden ocean that has many of the ingredients necessary to host primitive alien life.

Mimas is the latest to join a growing family of icy moons thought to harbour inner oceans in our Solar System which also includes fellow Saturn satellites Enceladus and Titan as well as Jupiter's Europa and Ganymede.

But the inclusion of Mimas in this list has come as a surprise.

"If there is one place in the universe where we did not expect to find conditions favourable to life, it is Mimas," said Paris Observatory astronomer Valery Lainey, the lead author of a new study in the journal Nature.

Mimas, which is only 400 kilometres (250 miles) in diameter, was "not at all suitable for the job", Lainey told a press conference.

Discovered by English astronomer William Herschel in 1789, the moon has the nickname "Death Star" because one particularly huge crater makes it look eerily similar to the space station used by Darth Vader and the villainous Empire in Star Wars.

Its craggy, crater-riddled surface is inert, showing no sign of underlying geologic activity that would suggest a hidden ocean.

- 'Something happening inside' -

Other water worlds such as Mimas' big sibling Enceladus have smooth surfaces due to their rumbling internal oceans and many geysers.

These geysers, which shoot out material from the surface, also demonstrate that there is enough heat below to keep the water in a liquid state.

Despite its seemingly desolate exterior, Lainey said the researchers suspected that "something was happening inside" Mimas.

They studied how the moon's rotation is affected by its interior structure, first publishing research in 2014 which was not strong enough to prove the presence of a hidden ocean.

Most scientists remained convinced by the other main hypothesis: that Mimas has a solid core of rock.

"We could have left it there," Lainey said, adding that they were "frustrated".

For the new study, the team carefully analysed the moon's rotation and orbit in dozens of images taken by NASA's Cassini spacecraft, which orbited Saturn from 2004 to 2017.

They detected tiny oscillations -- rotations of just a few hundred metres -- which could not have occurred if the moon had a solid rock interior.

"The only viable conclusion is that Mimas has a subsurface ocean," said two US-based scientists not involved in the study.

"The finding calls for a fresh take on what constitutes an ocean moon," Matija Cuk of the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence (SETI) and planetary scientist Alyssa Rose Rhoden wrote in a comment article in Nature.

- The right stuff for life -

Mimas' ice-covered shell is between 20 and 30 kilometres thick, similar to Enceladus, the study estimated.

The researchers believe the ocean formed relatively recently -- between five to 15 million years ago -- which could explain why signs of its existence have yet to rise and smooth the moon's surface.

The ocean likely exists due to the influence of Saturn's many other moons, whose tidal effects shook Mimas and created the necessary heat, they said.

Mimas "brings together all the conditions necessary for habitability: water maintained by a heat source that is in contact with rocks so that chemical exchanges develop," said study co-author Nicolas Rambaux, also of the Paris Observatory.

So could this nearby water world harbour primitive forms of life such as bacteria?

"That question will be addressed by future space missions over the coming decades," Lainey said.

"One thing is certain: if you are looking for the most recent conditions of habitability to have formed in the Solar System, Mimas is the place to look."

(F.Schuster--BBZ)