Acetylene Based Life on Titan? 272
mindpixel writes "Astrobiology Magazine's Leslie Mullen has a fascinating interview with funky science dude David Grinspoon about the possibility that there may exist a whole new biology on Titan where the extreme cold slows normally explosive reactions to a biologically useful pace." From the article: "What's really new in our paper is that we go into the question of energy sources. If there's life there, what's it going to eat? What kind of food is there? And it turns out there's abundant food because of all this photochemistry in the upper atmosphere, where methane is being turned into other organic molecules. Some of those organic molecules are very energy-rich, and one that we consider in the paper is acetylene. We know it's being made in the atmosphere, we know it's raining down on the surface, and it's been detected at the surface with the Huygens probe. We calculated that, if acetylene is reacting with the hydrogen gas to turn it back into methane, quite a bit of energy is being released. So that's our basis for saying there is something to eat on Titan. We don't know if there are any customers, but there's something on the menu."
Farts for dinner? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Farts for dinner? (Score:5, Funny)
Any Slashdot poster that farts acetylene is to be feared. From as far away as possible.
Re:Farts for dinner? (Score:2, Funny)
No, nevermind, I think I'll just buy the stuff afterall. Just don't tell me where it actually came from, 'K?
KFG
Re:Farts for dinner? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Farts for dinner? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Farts for dinner? (Score:5, Interesting)
As I understand it, bees create honey as a convenient way to store sustenance for themselves, not as a waste product. So it's not so much the piss of bees as the cud of bees, or perhaps the canned food of bees.
Re:Farts for dinner? (Score:3, Interesting)
Honey is bee barf (Score:2)
Re:Farts for dinner? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Farts for dinner? (Score:3, Informative)
Titan is COOOOOOOLD. Acetylene is much MORE reactive, such that at our "room temperature" it reacts much too easily and much too violently. Our bodies don't work at those temperatures, becuase you can't get oxygen t
Re:Farts for dinner? (Score:2)
Re:Farts for dinner? (Score:2, Informative)
Cool (Score:3, Funny)
Didn't Bush's new space exploration plan call for us to visit there, soon?
Re:Cool (Score:2)
Or are you a bot, so therefore consider a probe to be a fellow citizen of yours?
Life of Titan (Score:5, Funny)
Now if we could only be successful in finding intelligent life in Washington DC
Re:Reminds me of that Robotman joke... (Score:4, Insightful)
Misleading headline (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Misleading headline (Score:2)
not quite:
imagine a planet with a sugary rain . . .
Cool anyway, but the article wasn't that complete (Score:3, Interesting)
Reactions slows with temperature either because diffundation speed slows (the speed of molecules) or that the energy of the collisions between molecules aren't enought to make them react.
The molecular speed should be a problem. I believe cell size of modern life is limited by diffundation of oxygen and other molecules. Any life would have to use lots of transportation engines in their cells (or keep them ver
Re:Misleading headline (Score:2)
Re:Misleading headline (Score:2)
life on titan (Score:5, Funny)
Re:life on titan (Score:4, Funny)
Gotta love any sentence with both the word "missionary" and "pulling out"
Re:life on titan (Score:5, Funny)
"On the first day, God created the Earth
"I live on Titan, how does this apply to me?"
or:
"In Soviet Titan, Earth creates God!"
Re:life on titan (Score:3, Funny)
I live on Titan you insensitive clod
The actual line is
Genesis 1:1 In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth
, which includes Titan as well. Maybe you could be baptised on ammonia or methane.
Re:life on titan (Score:5, Interesting)
What is life, anyway? (Score:5, Interesting)
It is interesting, though, how the life and the planet co-evolves. Life has really changed Earth and it may have affected Titan, as well.
Re:What is life, anyway? (Score:2)
Re:What is life, anyway? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:What is life, anyway? (Score:2)
Re:What is life, anyway? (Score:5, Insightful)
1. Ability to store information.
2. Ability to process stored information to make
replicas of oneself.
3. Metabolism (to power the above).
Re:What is life, anyway? (Score:2)
Re:What is life, anyway? (Score:4, Interesting)
The earliest lifeforms will inherently have no "blueprints". In fact, the earliest proto-life won't necessarily make a copy of itself. What you're likely to see is chemicals that tend to catalyze reactions with various ligands to create chemicals similar to themselves. When the local "soup" becomes more concentrated with chemicals similar in form, eventually self-catalytic cycles can emerge - basically, a puddle of self-catalyzing goo that is a non-distinct "organism" which expands itself slowly outward. Large hypercycles may have many processes (even independent processes) competing for the same ligands and reactants; a particular cycle can benefit itself over its neighbors by beginning to poison its competitors' reactions. Even without membranes walling off distinct "organisms", and with each set of reactions scattered throughout the same space as its competitors, the individual processes can sabotage and even consume each other as ruthlessly as any modern day life. Eventually, membranes can form (membranes are surprisingly easy to establish; many chemicals inherently line up into sheets, which other chemical reactions or simply natural currents can make into small spheres) which provide defense for a tiny area. This area being small, all but one competing hypercycle gets killed off within it. If the remaining side hypercycle contains the processes for producing the membrane itself, you have a very inefficient, but functional, Ur-cell.
"Information" isn't needed for life. In fact, "information" is a concept that is context-sensitive; nothing inherently has "information", and in fact, our genes only contain "information" when we put those chemical structures in the context of "what will this do to us after a storm of chain reactions ends up down stream?". By themselves, they're just chemicals, reacting as chemicals do.
Re:What is life, anyway? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:What is life, anyway? (Score:2)
Oh, I don't know about that. I thought my tabs were dancing for me one day.
Anm
Re:What is life, anyway? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:What is life, anyway? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:What is life, anyway? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:What is life, anyway? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:What is life, anyway? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:What is life, anyway? (Score:2)
I'm putting off my re-entry to life as long as possible about now...
Re:What is life, anyway? (Score:5, Insightful)
"The property or quality that distinguishes living organisms from dead organisms and inanimate matter, manifested in functions such as metabolism, growth, reproduction, and response to stimuli or adaptation to the environment originating from within the organism."
There are some pretty standard requirements; the rock doesn't respond to stimuli, doesn't gorw, doesn't reproduce and doesn't evolve over time. Standard geological phenomena such as erosion don't count.
Re:What is life, anyway? (Score:3, Insightful)
It's amazing what has happened to the US. IN this day and age we are still fighting ignorance every day [cnn.com].
It seems silly to fight over the definition of life when the good citizens of Pennsylvania have decided that evolution is "just a theory".
Re:What is life, anyway? (Score:2)
There's nothing to note and nothing evil here. A single individual can adapt to the environment without ever evolving. If it is hot, you will sweat. That is an adaptation (reaction) to the environment, not evolution (however, the development of sweat glands is another matter entirely). You might also look for a shady spot. Or you can influence your environment to suit your needs.
Re:What is life, anyway? (Score:2, Insightful)
Amen, brother! There are still those so ignorant and steeped in their belief in evolution that they consider "adaptation to environment" must always mean "evolution" - even when it refers to a classification that can apply to a single infertile individual. Clearly, an individual can a
Re:What is life, anyway? (Score:2)
Re:What is life, anyway? (Score:3, Insightful)
Because "adaptation to the environment" is a term that describes what living things do every single day in order to keep living. Evolution does not happen within a single organism's lifespan. We certainly don't say that something is not alive just because we can't observe it evolving. Perhaps you should be a little less sensitive and stop looking for intelligent design conspiracies every
Re:What is life, anyway? (Score:2)
Re:What is life, anyway? (Score:2)
Re:What is life, anyway? (Score:2, Flamebait)
What an odd thing to say. First of all you yourself said that evolution does happen. Anyway....
If it's "very wrong" to teach evolution as though it was fact why is it OK to teach that some super intelligent being designed the universe? Where is your
Re:What is life, anyway? (Score:2)
Wrong! There's a very large probability that any random mutation will make a living being less adapted to its environment. Evolution works because there are a big lot of living beings, every one of which contains a large number of random mutations. A very small proportion of these mutations cause, by pure chance, a modification that will make that one ind
Re:What is life, anyway? (Score:2)
Re:What is life, anyway? (Score:5, Insightful)
Or, shorter, if you fight entropy you're alive. If you don't, you aren't.
Re:What is life, anyway? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:What is life, anyway? (Score:2)
What, do you think, this definition says about prions, though? Are they "alive"? What about virii?
Re:What is life, anyway? (Score:2)
Viruses ("virii" is cute, and I love the term just like I like "Elvii" for a bunch of Elvis impersonators, but technically wrong) are, well, kind of, but not really, alive according to the definition. They, individually, do not fight entropy; it doesn't eat or do anything else to gain energy, and if a virus is damaged, that's it - it doesn't heal. The genes they carry, however, do fight it.
The basic problem, as any philosophy stude
Re:Entropy is... (Score:2)
Your refrigerator (and pretty much any other machine) does that, too.
Re:What is life, anyway? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:What is life, anyway? (Score:2)
I think you're playing mighty fast and loose with 'complexity theory' and (as you're talking about entropy) thermodynamics. That 'law' only applies to closed systems, you know.
Or perhaps you meant entropy in the information-theoretic sense? Well, in that case it doesn't make much sense to me either ;)
Re:What is life, anyway? (Score:2)
If I shot you, you would still less entropy than your environment, but you'd be dead. This is generally true of all life - ending it does not greatly increase its entropy.
Further, it is generally recognized that current machines are not alive. For a test to be any good for checking for life, it needs some kind of exclusionary principal to remove machines from the mix. Your test does not
Re:What is life, anyway? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:What is life, anyway? (Score:2)
Re:What is life, anyway? (Score:3, Insightful)
Actually, it's not a 'what if'. Platinum powder will catalyze that reaction just fine. Well, at least as far as ethane. (not sure about the final step: ethane + H2 --> 2 methane)
Would we think of that as a life form?
Last I checked, nobody was saying platinum was alive.
Seriously though, "catalyzing a chemical reaction" is a terrible definition of 'life'.
Or would we require reproduction?
That's
Dave Barry came up with a good answer... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Dave Barry came up with a good answer... (Score:3, Funny)
So 500 pound gorillas aren't alive? They might not die, but they sure got angry with me when I tried that the other day.
Re:What is life, anyway? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:What is life, anyway? (Score:2)
1. Metabolizes.
2. Moves.
3. Responds.
4. Adapts.
5. Evolves.
6. Grows.
7. Homeostasis.
I wonder... (Score:5, Interesting)
"Amazing! The third planet creatures support temperatures so high that none of the titan lifeforms could withstand. Let's call them extremophiles [astrobiology.com]".
Kinda makes you think...
Re:I wonder... (Score:2)
Re:I wonder... (Score:2)
Re:I wonder... (Score:2)
Re:I wonder... (Score:2)
Re:I wonder... (Score:2)
Drop a radio transceiver onto the surface and we can talk about it.
Seriously, since FTL won't be happening in my lifetime, I kinda hope we find some sort of intelligent life elsewhere in our neighborhood to give space exploration a kick in the pants.
All we really know right now is nobody else around is using radio, but radio wouldn't even work all that well in some of the environments that have the potential to host some
Re:I wonder... (Score:2)
Reminds me of a Hal Clement story (Score:4, Interesting)
It was Earth, of course. The protagonist was an alien scientist kidnapped by drug smugglers and forced to analyze a horrific drug they'd been buying from the natives. It's a juvenile, really, but enjoyable by adults as well.
Original Article (long) (Score:5, Informative)
--Greg
Further study needed? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Further study needed? (Score:2)
I'm sure more people would agree if you said take 10Bn from the military instead.
Re:Further study needed? (Score:2)
Then you could build the solar system program for 95 billions.
Five billions only gets you papers from NASA and their standard contractors. :-(
Re:Further study needed? (Score:2)
Well lets take it to its logical conclusion... what would a unified space program do, exactly? First thing I would do is set up a space station with an actual functional purpose, as a launch point for probes and a gathering point for data and samples, and expandable of course.
Next a methodical automated probe search of the whole system, with certain goals in mind, such as habitability, mineral value, and exisitng life forms. The emphasis should be on redundancy, with thousands of cheap probes sent to eac
Genocide (Score:4, Funny)
The Bigger Question (Score:5, Interesting)
Not anonymous because I am not afraid, though I may regret it in the near term.
Question? What question? (Score:3)
Hello? 21st century here, all $DEITY's should be buried by now. Open your eye's people, Darwin's theory [wikipedia.org] has been out for nearly 150 years, religion has long been obsolete!
Bring it on you fundi's, I dare you. Modding me down will get you a one-way ticket to Hell...
Re:Question? What question? (Score:2)
Re:Question? What question? (Score:3, Insightful)
Why is it so important to some atheists to ram the theory of godlessness down the throats of others: a behavior identical to many of those being vilified (the "fundi's" [sic] in this case). There is a dearth of evidence for either position, so it really does come
Re:The Bigger Question (Score:2)
I mostly know about Catholic teachings, but most non-fundamentalist Christian groups hold the whole 7 day creation bit to be metaphorical. ie the 7 days represent 7 distinct periods during creation, which could be millions of years long. Just because there isn't any specific mention of an event doesn't mean it couldn't have happened. "On the x day God created the heavens and the earth." Heavens= moon, stars, Titans, etc.
At least for Catholics, the big ban
Spallation? (Score:2, Interesting)
This is a great topic to stump some of the more well educated scientists. N2 ----> 14CN.
http://www.sns.gov/aboutsns/what-why.htm [sns.gov]
My question: does spallation work on Titan? I know that Saturn has an intense magnetic field, but I don't know if Saturn emits high energy
Titan is OURS (Score:3, Funny)
I'm assuming the warning covers the rest of the solar system. So those little black rectangles can kiss our carbon based rear ends.
Also, members of the Titan version of Slashdot are probably saying, "I for one welcome our monkey-based overlords."
Re:Titan is OURS (Score:2)
Acetylene + hydrogen - methane. Huh!? (Score:2)
This reaction doesn't make any sense. The C-C bond is much too stronger to be broken by a small release of energy done by the hydrogen absorbtion. At worst, this will generate etylene in the first step, and then ethane
Re:Acetylene + hydrogen - methane. Huh!? (Score:3, Informative)
Sure it does. C2H2 + H2 --> CH4 is exothermic by about 300 kJ/mol. That is, 300 kJ of heat are released for every mole of acetylene consumed.
Maybe it's confusing because we usually think of energy-releasing respiration-type reductions in the context of our nice highly oxidizing atmosphere? So that most reactions we think of as "energy producing" are combustion reactions, combinations of hydrocarbons with oxygen? But there's no free oxygen on Titan, so that's out.
OT (Score:2)
Now I understand why Huygens lasted 3x too long! (Score:3, Informative)
Then once on ground, this heating continued, and Huygens whose batteries had been designed to last "the 3-hours descent + some margins" in a -150 degree environment, lasted indeed six hours more for being much hotter...
Hervé, part of the Huygens technical team
OK, as we are not april 1st now I wonder wether I shoulnd't have posted anonymously
Bleah! Cancell my tickets to Titan! (Score:2)
Re:Isn't the smell artificial? (Score:2)
DOH! (Score:3, Informative)
DG: By ultraviolet light and also by interactions with Saturn's magnetosphere. There's a lot of energy up there. Then the acetylene is raining down and getting buried....
Other than that small confusion in the heads of the interviewers, I find the concept of acetylene based life very intriguing.
I, for one, welcome our new acetylene metabolizing overlords.
Yet Another Overlord? (Score:3, Funny)
I'm back. The delivery man gave me this package. It had this cool hat in it. It's a gelatinous blue with tentacles. It looked just like the one he was wearing. Except his was pulsating. I'm going to try it on.
I FOR ONE WELCOME OUR NEW ACETYLENE BASED LIFEFORM TITAN OVERLORDS. TIME TO DELIVER MORE HATS.
I vote we call em Hortas (Score:2)
Re:Acetylene *IS* Organic.... (Score:5, Insightful)
"Complex-molecule-based" versus "simple-carbon-based" ?? Did you make up those terms yourself? Could you please define them? And perhaps elaborate on how this is supposed to follow from the statement "acetylene is organic"?
Because the statement "acetylene is organic" doesn't mean anything in particular. It's saying that the acetylene molecule has a carbon-carbon bond in it.
But the other people saying 'no' are (as far as I can tell thru HISTORY) full of horse-hockey.
Who is saying 'no' to what?
Tell me exactly what in the world you know about organic compounds on another planet that will/will not produce life, please?
Since this is the first semi-intelligible statement in your post, I'll try and answer it:
1) Most scientists believe that life in all its forms, terrestrial or otherwise, follows the laws of chemistry. All life we know of appears to do so.
In the same way that we also believe that all the universe follows the same laws of physics. We have no reason to believe otherwise. (and the chemistry follows from the physics, anyway.)
2) We know that certain conditions are required to sustain life regardless of its form. For instance, life requires energy. This follows from the laws of thermodynamics being one of those things believed to be universal in 1).
3) We have labs. We don't have to go to another planet to figure out how chemistry works at extreme temperatures and pressures.
Yes, it's flamebait/trollbait. How about you editors/moderators tell me your experience on Titan, [..]
No, it's just moronic. How about you tell me about all those atoms you've seen yourself? Still believe they exist though, don't you?
Let the organic/biological scientists determine this, not the uneducated populace.
David Grinspoon is an adjunct Professor at the University of Colorado. Hardly "uneducated populace".
Even I don't dare step into this conversation, except as far as I have made my agrument.
You didn't really make one.
Re:Acetylene *IS* Organic.... (Score:2)