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Some laboratory work has been done to simulate what may be happening on Titan. In 1988, Carl Sagan and colleagues at Cornell University carried out experiments in which they simulated the chemistry of Titan's atmosphere. Starting with a mixture of nitrogen, methane, hydrogen, and helium at the appropriate pressures and concentrations, they subjected this to a high voltage to mimic the effect of an aurora. Various organic materials were produced, including hydrocarbon chains up to 7 carbon atoms long, nitriles, and a brownish-orange solid with optical properties similar to those of Titan's haze established by Voyager and ground-based observations. Titan's low temperature and consequent lack of liquid water may have inhibited more complex organic chemistry, though it is not clear to what extent volcanism and major impacts may have furnished locally more favorable conditions for prebiotic development. There is the possibility of cryovolcanism - volcanism in which the fluid is not molten rock, but liquid water that possibly includes ammonia and other antifreezes. This would be important because it would allow for the liquid water to be briefly present at times and to modify the organics locally in some way.
Some answers to the mysteries of Titan will hopefully come
from the Cassini mission and, in particular, from the Huygens
Probe when in descends through the atmosphere of Titan in 2004. Whatever
molecules are generated in the atmosphere will presumably, over time, be deposited
on the moon's surface. The atmospheric pressure at Titan's surface is 50 percent
higher than on Earth, comparable with the pressure at the bottom of a 3-meter-deep
swimming pool. Titan's thick atmosphere protects the surface and organics from
harmful cosmic rays and ultraviolet radiation. Particularly exciting would be
if Huygen's found any variations in the apparent organic composition that are
correlated with impact carters or sites of volcanism. In this case, such sites
would earmarked as potential places to visit in the future. Could Titan host
primitive life? Some scientists have begun increasingly to speculate about this.
One possibility is that microorganisms could exist in Titan's deep interior
where liquid water may be available all the time. Another possibility is active
water volcanism which would lead to transient water flows and the outside chance
of surface biology. Yet again, Titan must be heated occasionally by large impacts.
In the early 1990s, Carl Sagan and W. Reid Thompson of Cornell University suggested
that impacts on the surface of Titan would melt the icy crust and produce liquid
water.1 Finally, it has been suggested that life on Titan might have
a fundamentally different basis to that on Earth. One possibility is that, instead
of water, hydrocarbons, which are naturally liquid
on Titan, might act as a solvent for life directly. In many ways, hydrocarbon
solvents are better than water for managing complex organic chemical reactivity.
See also ammonia-based life and silicon-based
life.2, 3
References