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Life on other planets

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~Akane~
10/05/2017 17:21:26
Many celestial bodies in the Solar System are thought to have life. In the list below, three of the five celestial bodies are satellites, and are thought to contain liquid in the ground, where life can be like the deep sea. Venus - the second planet from the sun - Carbonyl sulfide, the basis for life has just been found in the Venusian atmosphere. Mars - the fourth planet from the Sun - has liquid water that has existed in the past and remains liquid beneath the surface. Recently, methane has been found in Martian atmospheres. View Main Post: Mars. Titan - Saturn's largest satellite, the only satellite has a remarkable atmosphere. Recent discoveries indicate that there is no sea covered but that there may be seasonal hydrarachers. Europa - the fourth largest satellite of Jupiter - seems to have a sea of ​​salt under the thin ice cover. If this satellite had any life, much hope could find the same form of life as in volcanic craters on Earth. Furthermore, cosmologists are hoping to find anaerobic life under the sea by stirring up the lunar surface. Enceladus, Saturn's sixth-largest satellite, observed geologic activity along with liquid water and water circuits at the south pole. Many other celestial bodies are also thought to have signs of microbial life. Examples are hypotheses that there is life in the atmosphere of Venus or that there may be life on comets, just like some of the germs on Earth survived successfully as a study of the Moon. In many years. However, there is little hope that complex multicellular organisms can survive under these conditions.

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Trinh Le
10/05/2017 17:23:56
I sometimes dream about meeting an alien from Mars. He looks very strange. He has big eyes and he is a little bigger and more violent than me. His skin is black . He has no hair on his head but he has an antenna. He wears clothing but it is made of metal. It's very strong. He looks really powerful and he tells me that he always has to fight for the freedom of his planet. There are a lot of invaders from the Galaxy who want to control his planet. He loves peace and he will do everything to protect his planet.
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~Akane~
10/05/2017 17:24:10
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Venus - the second planet from the sun - Carbonyl sulfide, the basis for life has just been found in the Venusian atmosphere. Mars - the fourth planet from the Sun - has liquid water that has existed in the past and remains liquid beneath the surface. Recently, methane has been found in Martian atmospheres. View Main Post: Mars. Titan - Saturn's largest satellite, the only satellite has a remarkable atmosphere. Recent discoveries indicate that there is no sea covered but that there may be seasonal hydrarachers. Europa - the fourth largest satellite of Jupiter - seems to have a sea of ​​salt under the thin ice cover. If this satellite had any life, much hope could find the same form of life as in volcanic craters on Earth. Furthermore, cosmologists are hoping to find anaerobic life under the sea by stirring up the lunar surface. Enceladus, Saturn's sixth-largest satellite, observed geologic activity along with liquid water and water circuits at the south pole.
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The Future In Study ...
10/05/2017 17:25:48
Until a couple years ago, Mars has always been the top candidate for aplanet other than Earth where life might be found. What if Mars disappoints us? Are there other candidates in the solar system? 

The answer is yes, and the next-best shot at finding extra-terrestrial life forms is on Europa, a moon of the planet Jupiter. Right now, there is no other body in the solar system that attracts as much scientific attention as this bright strange-looking moon, the smallest of Jupiter's four large satellites. Shown below, top to bottom (and as you would approach them moving outward from Jupiter) are Io, Europa, Ganymede and Callisto.

The Galilean moons of Jupiter: Io, Europa, Ganymede and Callisto. (Courtesy: NASA)
Europa seems like a good bet. Life might be a bit strange, but perhaps not a lot stranger than the life forms recently found around hot vents in the abyssal ocean. Liquid water and sources of energy are the essential prerequisites for Life. Europa might well have them. Strong tidal heat could keep the inside of Europa warm enough to have liquid water beneath a layer of ice. Therefore, any organic compounds would be mobile, in water. They could interact. 

Let's have a closer look at Europa as a possible host of Life. Europa is the fourth largest moon of Jupiter and the sixth largest moon in the solar system. Europa's surface is covered with ice. From the pictures taken by Galileo (the space craft, not the astronomer), its surface looks like broken glass that is repaired by icy glue oozing up from below. Low ridges, straight and curved, crisscross the surface. Flows and fractures, pits and frozen "puddles" - all hint at a unique geologic history. Due to its smooth surface, it is the brightest moon is the solar system. 

It is quite unlike its fellow moons Callisto and Ganymede with their heavily cratered crusts. Europa has almost a complete absence of craters as well as almost no vertical relief. This interesting feature makes it difficult to find out the age of this moon. Geologists determine the relative age of a surface by counting the number of impact craters. We all know our Moon has many craters. It suggests that our moon has been geologically inactive for about 4000 million years. In contrast, there is very little evidence of impacts on the surface of Europa. Unless Europa is fortunate enough to somehow avoid the impacts suffered throughout the rest of the solar system, it must have gone through some kind of geological process that erased the evidence of almost all of those impacts. 

Europa has an icy crust that has been severely fractured, as indicated by the dark linear, curved, and wedged-shaped bands seen in images of the surface. These fractures have broken the crust into plates as large as 30 kilometers (18.5 miles) across. Areas between the plates are filled with material that was probably icy slush contaminated with rocky debris. Some individual plates were separated and rotated into new positions. 

Surface of Europa showing fractured crust and absence of any cratering. (Courtesy: NASA)
By studying Europa's density we can tell that it has a shell of water ice, parts of which could be liquid. Models of Europa's interior show that beneath a thin 5 km (3 miles) crust of water ice, Europa may have oceans as deep as 50 km (30 miles) or more. There is some evidence indicating that Europa may be slushy just beneath the icy crust and possibly even warmer at greater depths. The evidence includes a strangely shallow impact crater, chunky textured surfaces like icebergs, and gaps where new icy crust seems to have formed between continent-sized plates of ice. 

Thus, much of the evidence points to a mobile surface provided by liquid water. Liquid water, scientists believe, could exist below the surface because of internal tidal heating from gravitational interactions with Jupiter and the other Galilean moons. (The Galilean moons are the four shown above, so named because they were first observed by Galileo.) 

Another planetoid mentioned in connection with Life in the solar system is Titan, the largest of the moons of Saturn. Titan has an atmosphere largely made up of nitrogen, with less than one percent of methane. The surface pressure of Titan's atmosphere is higher than that of Earth, but the temperature is extremely cold. A rich assortment of organic moleculesis found in Titan's atmosphere, as products of the methanechemistry. The mixture includes hydrogen cyanide, a compound in the path to the synthesis of amino acids This finding has led to speculations that primitive life forms might be present. The low temperatures on this satellite make it unlikely.

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