Titan Occupies A Solar System Sweet Spot 243
SocietyoftheFist writes "From an article on the BBC website, scientists have determined that Titan occupies a 'sweet spot' much like Earth. Venus is the same size as Earth but too hot so water boiled off long ago ending most geologic processes. Mars is too small to generate enough heat to keep water from freezing so it too slowed down geologically. Titan is much like the Earth with winds, rains and tectonic forces but instead of water it has an abundance of methane. Methane is liquid at the temperatures found in Titan's atmosphere and replaces water in the equation."
Hmm, methane (Score:4, Funny)
I say we go get rid of the terrorist on Titan.
Re:Hmm, methane (Score:2)
While crude oil does contain some methane, that is not the primary component, nor the one we use for diesel or common car gas.
Methane is very flammable.. you'd have to keep the gas compressed all the time.. seems like an awful lot of trouble.
The political motivations of your post however, are quite clear... Go post on fark if you want to start a flame war.
Re:Hmm, methane (Score:2)
True, the major components of gasoline are Octane and he[iane. Of course thare are many other additives including ethano;.
"Methane is very flammable.. you'd have to keep the gas compressed all the time.."
You'd have to keep it compressed because it is a gas at room temperature, so it would take up a lot of space. Of course you could keep it in a gas bag on the roof of the vehicle like people did in WWII with coal gas.
Methane is the major component of 'n
Re:Hmm, methane (Score:2, Interesting)
Published November 1, 1998.
I remember hearing about the "Columbia Disaster" and thinking
Re:BRING EM ON!!!!! (Score:2)
Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
Of course! (Score:2)
Let me guess... (Score:2)
Article lacks accuracy? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Article lacks accuracy? (Score:3, Interesting)
We don't just retain heat, we generate heat. Otherwise the earth's core would have solidified a long time ago, and we'd be very irradiated.
If a smaller planet were in earth's orbit, it might not generate enough heat on its own to thaw out of an ice age.
Re:Article lacks accuracy? (Score:2)
Can you explain how the heat is generated? I always assumed that the Earth's core (and mantle) are hot because it takes a really long time for all that molten rock to cool off. All the rocks that collided together 4.5 billion years ago to form the Earth generated (past tense) a lot of heat from collisions, but there's no internal heat generator.
So correct me.
Re:Article lacks accuracy? (Score:2)
Re:Article lacks accuracy? (Score:2)
First, there's friction between the layers of gooey nougat inside the earth as they move at different velocities with respect to each other. Secondly, friction from the tectonic plates moving on top of that gooey nougat (the continents, by providing thicker insulation in parts, also assure temperature differentials in the gooey nougat, causing yet more motion). Third, tidal forces from the moon and the sun that stir the gooey nougat up as they move around (bringin
Re:Article lacks accuracy? (Score:2)
See Lord Kelvin and the Age of the Earth [rochester.edu] (PDF).
Re:Article lacks accuracy? (Score:2)
However, the truth is that the inside of the planet is hollow, and populated. There's a star at the center. There's even a small moon! It's a neat place.
Re:Article lacks accuracy? (Score:2)
Re:Article lacks accuracy? (Score:2)
Solar proximity is only one of the determining factors for hospitable planets.
For example, take Earth and put it in Mars orbit. You don't get a frozen barren planet. You get a cooler planet for sure, but one that would still harbor life quite comfortably.
Put Earth in Venus's orbit, and you get a waremer world for sure, but one that could still harbor life.
Earth isn't Earth just because of where it's located. Our gravity allows for our planet to maintain an atmosphere. We have enoug
Re:Article lacks accuracy? (Score:2)
Speed (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Speed (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Speed (Score:3, Informative)
You want reactions that are slow, but that can be sped up using a catalyst when necessary. That allows you to control the reactions and switch them on and off as needed. In biological systems enzymes are the catalysts.
Re:Speed (Score:2)
Yes. What that means is that reactions that are "just right" on earth will be too slow on Titan. But there are almost certainly equivalent reactions that would be too fast at our temperatures but just right on Titan. They wouldn't even have to be radically different.
Re:Speed (Score:2)
Methane doesn't replace water. (Score:5, Informative)
Methane is a lot less likely to be the "solvent" for life as water is. Water has a lot of very unusual properties which are important factors in the biochemical reactions of life; the most important of these is its strong polar nature. The polarity of water is a, if not the (biochemists feel free to correct me, i'm synthetic org.), major factor in protein folding; the ability of water to dissolve ionic compounds is also vitally important, e.g. nerve function. Bottom line, a nonpolar organic solvent is a *lot* less likely, if not impossible, to support life.
Re:Methane doesn't replace water. (Score:2)
I wonder if water has to be liquid for these properties to come into play. I am thinking about bacteria found inside Antarctic rocks.
Also I wonder if bacteria could create their own microclimates inside ice blocks, kept liquid by their own metabolism.
Re:Methane doesn't replace water. (Score:2)
Re:Methane doesn't replace water. (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Methane doesn't replace water. (Score:5, Interesting)
Our experience life is, let's face it, laughable. We only have one genesis to work with. The premise of liquid water is solely based on Earth observations. I don't know about you, but at least I don't know about any holiday resort on Earth next to a liquid methane lake. there just aren't any.
If I hear about an energy source, complex carbon-based chemicals and a liquid to mix them, then, with an open mind, I think some emerging intelligence may occur after billions of years. Even if it is a freak accident, if you believe a complex system can exist for even a few hundred millions of years without one freak accident, then you're obviously not an engineer. Maybe it will not be life as we know it, but damnit Jim, it will be alive!
Re:Methane doesn't replace water. (Score:5, Insightful)
This is a fallacy. There is no inherent trend towards complexity. Evolution progresses only towards adaptedness, even if it means that the next generation is simpler than the current one.
Evolution and complexity (Score:2)
As long as everyone's asexual and existing on sunlight, it's all good, but the moment you get a predator/prey split, you have an arms race.
Re:Evolution and complexity (Score:2)
What about asexual and shunning sunlight, like slashdotters?
Re:Methane doesn't replace water. (Score:2)
Obviously, you have never dealt with christmas lights.
~X~
Re:Methane doesn't replace water. (Score:2)
Except it doesn't require just any freak accident, it would require one very specific type of freak accident to generate life. In fact, since we still don't know exactly how life is generated we really can't say what is required for it to come about.
Re:Methane doesn't replace water. (Score:2)
Just thought I'd throw it out there that this assumes the kind of life we're used to is the only kind.
Although I suppose if we came into contact with radically different life forms, we might not even know they're there!
Re:Methane doesn't replace water. (Score:4, Insightful)
Is there any analog of a lipid in methane? One which can form a bi-layer bubble?
Re:Methane doesn't replace water. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Methane doesn't replace water. (Score:2)
But that's metaphysics, not science.
There is a story of a puddle which forms in a hole in some cement. The puddle thinks "ooooo what a nice hole, it fits me perfectly, it must have been made for me. The puddle keeps thinking this right up until the last drop dries up.
My personal opinion is that "life" is just a word with no particular meaning. Some systems appear to be "alive" to us because we are systems evolved to distingui
Re:Methane doesn't replace water. (Score:2)
life anywhere other than Earth yet, we are looking at a 0% chance based on past results.
From a purely statistical perspective, this is incorrect. The sample size is not large enough for any conclusions to be drawn about the frequency of life throughout the universe, or even just the galaxy.
Re:Methane doesn't replace water. (Score:3, Insightful)
Proteins fold no matter what environment they are in, they simply fold differently in different environments. There is no reason to believe that folding in solvents other than water would be any worse for evolving life than folding in water.
the ability of water to dissolve ionic compounds is also vitally important, e.g. nerve function
Organisms on Titan may dispense with all thos
Great! (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Great! (Score:2)
You only get energy out of the methane if you combine it with oxygen. Personally I need oxygen to breathe. Also you would be importing carbon from Titan, which would become carbon doxide on Earth.
I wonder. (Score:2, Interesting)
Typo. (Score:2)
Re:I wonder. (Score:2)
Re:I wonder. (Score:2)
That was a long time ago, and it was only because the doppler-shift techniques used for detecting them were intially only sensitive enough to detect massive super-jovian planets.
If you take a look at an extra-solar planets catalog [obspm.fr] you'll find lots of sub jovian planets. Note that a lot of them have pretty short periods, but again this is more a feature of the way they're detected, a
Re:Well... (Score:2)
400e9 / 1e6 = 400e3 stars with planets;
400e3 / 1e6 = 0.4 planets with life;
0.4 / 1e6 = 0.0000004 planets with civilization(s).
So it's 0.00004% of one civilization, and not "millions" as you cite. You need to gather 2,500,000 of "our galaxies" to get to one civilization, and you already have one, so go and get another 2.5 million of galaxies if you need aliens.
Methane ice worms living on Earth (Score:5, Informative)
Image here. [psu.edu]
Text:
Methane clathrate deposits in the ocean floor have been found to be inhabited by polychaete worms of the species Hesiocaeca methanicola. The worms colonize the ice-methane solid and appear to survive by gleaning bacteria that in turn metabolize the clathrate. In 1997, Charles Fisher, professor of biology at Penn State, discovered this remarkable creature living on mounds of methane ice under half a mile of ocean on the floor of the Gulf of Mexico.
Re:Methane ice worms living on Earth (Score:4, Funny)
I hope that is an electron micrograph you have there. Otherwise I am going to cut down on my enthusiasm for Titan exploration.
Cue James Cameron.
Try this picture instead (Score:3, Interesting)
http://images.google.com/images?q=methane%20worms
Boil point of methane... (Score:2)
Pointless what-if? (Score:2, Interesting)
Europa would be an interesting candidate too... but maybe this sort of speculation belongs in the 'Who would win: Skeletor vs Dr.Doom' category.
Re:Pointless what-if? (Score:2)
Possibly. But not for very long, at least in the geological sense. Titan's able to maintain its dense atmosphere because it is so bitterly cold. The kinetic energy of its atmospheric gas molecules is not very high, so Titan's weak gravity is able to hold onto them. With significant heating, the atmosphere would bleed away.
Quite a lot of Titan is made out of ices. These will replenish the escaping atmosphere, for a while. But it also means
Sure about Venus? (Score:2)
Re:Sure about Venus? (Score:3, Informative)
The additional heat that it receives from the sun, combined with that length of exposure to it, meant temperatures soared.
The atmosphere is mainly Sulphur Dioxide. The planet has been wrought with volcanism in the past, so much so that the whole surface is about the same age.
Any water Venus may have had is long gone.
The thick atmosphere acts as a blanket, trapping the heat
Re:Sure about Venus? (Score:2)
Re:Sure about Venus? (Score:2)
Re:Sure about Venus? (Score:2)
Article assumption (Score:2, Insightful)
Surface life may well prove to the the rarity.
Somewhere like Ganymede, or Europa, has a far greater habitability beneath the surface.
Sub-surface regions seems generally more likely to allow life to get started than surfaces. A bit of activity there is good, as life thrives in changing rather than fixed environments (as far as we know).
Even life on earth began below the surface, in the oceans.
Sub-surf
Captin, I fail to see the logic of this... (Score:3, Funny)
Something doesn't make sense here. (Score:2)
Venus is about the same size as Earth. But it is so close to the Sun that any water it had must have boiled off. As such, there is no hydrological cycle and no tectonic activity, says Lunine.
I'd really like to know what connection Lunine thinks there is between tectconic activity isn't related to water in any way. Living as I do in Los Angeles, I'm rather familiar with it.
Re:Something doesn't make sense here. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Something doesn't make sense here. (Score:2)
In the case of thrust
subject here (Score:2, Funny)
Life from 4 elements? (Score:2, Funny)
So to get life you need 4 elements?
Wind = Air;
Tectonic Forces = Earth;
Liquid Methane = Water;
And Fire would be... Required temperature or lightning?
Storm. In an ocean or just on a coast lightning striking something? Perhaps that's how life is born?
Not that I have any idea what I'm talking about... :)
Wha? No Lifeforms? (Score:2)
Re:Methane! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Methane! (Score:2)
Re:methane? (Score:3, Interesting)
Its not oxygen, its not water, its not livable, its not breathable, and I'm sure as hell that the temperature's not close to tolerable.
Re:methane? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:methane? (Score:3, Funny)
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:methane? (Score:3, Funny)
"Hey look i have created..."
KA-BOOM
Re:methane? (Score:3, Interesting)
If so, please contact someone in the scientific community immediately.
Re:methane? (Score:3, Insightful)
2. Take out the dictionary
3. Look up the word theoretical
Re:methane? (Score:2)
No theory was presented. Speculation without a rational basis is called "imagination", not theory.
Re:methane? (Score:2)
But anyway, the theory is that polylipids might be able replace proteins, but yes it's speculation based upon basic chemical properties.
Re:methane? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:methane? (Score:2)
Yours Yazeran
Plan: To go to Mars one day with a ha
Re:methane? (Score:5, Interesting)
That is true, but you also have to take into account the fact that solid water (ice) is less dense then liquid water. We take it for granted, but think about how it affects our planet. The bottom of the ocean is not solid like the bottom of a methane ocean. They are liquid and at a controlled temperature (4 degrees celcius). How much of a role does this little oddity of water play into our planet's evolution?
Re:methane? (Score:5, Informative)
YHBT. HAND. (Score:2)
Re:methane? (Score:2)
Re:methane? (Score:2)
Re:methane? (Score:2)
Re:methane? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:methane? (Score:2)
As a matter of fact, I have - but I still don't get how they came across the pantyhose, the tutu, and the bubblegum?
Re:Wow! (Score:5, Interesting)
Has anyone considered that maybe Earth is just the most Titan-like place in the Solar System other than Titan?
Re:Actually living on Titan (Score:2)
They are not saying that humans could live in the open on Titan. Only that small colonies of organisims could live in some isolates spots on the surface.
Plus the fact that the hot spots on Titan that are generated by its own core, are going to be tiny.
Tidal heating from Saturn makes geothermal energy a better prospect on Titan than it is on Earth.
You are not going to be able to eat or drink as there is
From the pictures (Score:2)
You could extract the oxygen and hydrogen from the water ice pebbles or merely use it for drinking water or growing plants.
Electricity and heating would be supplied by the frozen natural gas present EVERYWHERE.
You just get the fire started and use material for insulation and you could live there and grow vegetables under metal halide lighting from the generators burning natural gas.
Of course you could do all this but it wouldnt be very interesti
Re:From the pictures (Score:2)
you (Score:2)
Re:you (Score:3, Informative)
It takes 118 kcal to turn two H20 molecules into one 02 molecule (I'm ignoring the hydrogen as waste for the moment.)
You need two O2 molecules to react with one molecule of methane. This reaction will produce
191.6826 kcal.
Which means that it would take a net energy input of 44 kilocalories per each molecule of methane that you burn.
You better make that a large fire to start with because it will only get
Re:From the pictures (Score:2)
S-C-I-E-N-C-E
That's reason enough.
Re:Actually living on Titan (Score:2)
You are more optimistic than me. I think in 50-100 years we will know whether Life As We Know It is unique to Earth, or a more general (geologic?) attribute of matter.
I side with (Score:2)
Take a look at calcium for example. Have you ever noticed how coral skeletons share ALOT in common with limestone formations in a cave? It's just the structure calcium follows, perhaps the corals just take advantage of this fact and nurture it's natural crystalline form to create their skeletons. Some formations in caves are so spot on that they refer to the formation as 'cave coral'.
Re:Actually living on Titan (Score:2)
It's hot enough to keep certain organisms that rely on chemosynthesis [wikipedia.org] alive at the ocean bottom, where no radiation from the sun reaches. There's little reason to believe this process couldn't happen on any reasonably volcanic body.
Re:What about Uranus? (Score:2)
Re:What about Uranus? (Score:2)
Re:What about Uranus? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Vonnegut knew this 40+ years ago.... (Score:3, Interesting)
Folks, Vonnegut is "Kurt Vonnegut, Jr.", the referenced work is "The Sirens of Titan", and the "ice-nine" reference is from another book: "Cat's Cradle".
In "The Sirens of Titan" (been years since I read it, so I'll try my best), one of Vonnegut's earliest works, much is made of the notion that Titan enjoyed conditions similar to Earth's as the article states, and so some of the action takes place on Titan, whi