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Watch NASA’s latest discovery about “ocean worlds” — and their capacity to sustain life

NASA found compelling evidence that Enceladus, Saturn’s icy moon, contains the right chemicals to support life.

Brian Resnick
Brian Resnick was Vox’s science and health editor and is the co-creator of Unexplainable, Vox’s podcast about unanswered questions in science.

This week, NASA announced some exciting new findings about “oceans beyond Earth.”

The gist: The space agency has found the most compelling evidence yet that the ocean underneath the icy crust of Enceladus, Saturn’s sixth-largest moon, could contain life. In the past, the Cassini spacecraft has observed jets of water containing organic chemicals streaming from Enceladus. This latest finding adds a key ingredient for life to the mix: hydrogen. The presence of hydrogen in the jets makes NASA scientists suspect there are geothermal geysers on Enceladus’s ocean floor. Like the geothermal vents deep within Earth’s oceans, these could be home to microbes that use the chemical energy of hydrogen and carbon dioxide to produce methane and energy for life. (Also today, NASA announced it has collected more (not-yet-conclusive) evidence that there are also water vapor plumes emanating from Europa, Jupiter’s icy moon. )

The announcement streamed live on NASA TV on April 13, but you can watch the replay right here.

In the last leg of its life, Cassini keeps generating fascinating insights

The Cassini mission is at the end of an impressive 20-year run. In its final days, the spacecraft has been churning out intriguing discoveries. Today’s announcement adds one more to the list.

In 2004, Cassini became the first spacecraft to orbit Saturn. In its explorations of the planet’s magnetosphere and various moons, it has found evidence of an underground ocean on Enceladus. On the moon Titan, it revealed surprisingly Earthlike geographic features and great lakes of liquid natural gas on its surface that outweigh all the oil and gas reserves on Earth. It learned how new moons could form out of Saturn’s rings. And it has taken detailed, beautiful photographic surveys of the planet’s rings and surface features.

Now it’s beginning a series of harrowing orbits that bring it into the space between the planet and its rings — a region no spacecraft has been before. When Cassini is in the inner rings, it will finally be able to take the measurements that will aid in calculations to determine the mass of the rings.

Come September, the 20-year-old spacecraft will crash into Saturn, having spent all of its fuel. But the death dive isn’t just for fireworks. If Cassini doesn’t plunge into Saturn’s atmosphere, it runs the risk of potentially contaminating one of the planet’s moons with debris and microbes from Earth.

Cassini’s dramatic finale is also a last chance to squeeze some more insights out of the 20-year-old spacecraft. As the craft descends into Saturn’s atmosphere, “several of the instruments will be on,” including the mass spectrometer, Preston Dyches, a NASA spokesperson says. This instrument essentially can “sniff” the atmosphere and determine the chemical compounds it’s composed of.

When Cassini finally goes offline in September, it will die doing what it’s been doing all along: exploring.

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