Radio Wave on Saturn's Moon Hints at Hidden Ocean 101
SleepyHappyDoc writes "The European Space Agency has announced that a mysterious radio wave may indicate the existence of a hidden ocean underneath the surface of Titan. The Cassini-Huygens spaceprobe, which entered Titan's atmosphere over two years ago, collected evidence and information which has led to this potential discovery. This technology may lead to entirely new ways of finding out information about other planets."
Don't tell me... (Score:4, Funny)
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NASA Successfully Translates Radio Signal (Score:4, Funny)
people have suspected this before (Score:3, Interesting)
Question is, is there underground life? If so what the heck does it look like and what does it do?
I hope the Huygens probe hasn't contaminated the environment my spreading earth bacteria.
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Re:people have suspected this before (Score:5, Funny)
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People have suspected this before, since the core is hot, and there is frozen methane on the surface, isn't it obvious there should be a liquids in the middle layer?
No. In science, like patents, nothing is obvious. Everything is classified as Eureka.
Question is, is there underground life? If so what the heck does it look like and what does it do?
Who cares as long as it doesn't look like something you'd find on Goatse.cx.
I hope the Huygens probe hasn't contaminated the environment my spreading earth bacteria.
Sorry, but I'm sure it has. We are humans and we eventually ruin everything we touch.
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Yeah, but the dinosaurs touched it first, and apparently the cockroaches have always been touching it, so your pessimism is quite unfounded.
Re:people have suspected this before (Score:5, Funny)
Actually, it looks like Paris Hilton.
and what does it do?
Shockingly enough, it pretty much does nothing, just like Paris Hilton.
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Yeah right. That's a great way to make first contact.
:-\
Alien or not, that comparison is just unfair.
I could make a Sarah Silverman joke [youtube.com], but that would be unfair, too.
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Since the planet's temperature is around 179 C, the water is rock solid and the methane is in liquid state like what water is to us.
Curiously, when the first pictures of Titan's surface appeared, they showed a earth-like surface, with rivers of methane similar to our rivers of water.
Also... Water vulcanos! how cool is that?
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What Will the Underwater Life Look Like (Score:2)
I thought Titan was a MOON (or a "satellite") (Score:3, Insightful)
I thought Titan was a MOON (or a "satellite")
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But mice are RODENTS!
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We've got a thing that's called... (Score:4, Funny)
We've got a wave in the air...
Radar Love...
(With apologies to the esteemed Golden Earring [wikipedia.org], and to the moderators whose fingers may be sprained modding down yet another inane, content-free comment.)
"Mysterious wave" (Score:5, Interesting)
And there's no point in reading TFA in order to try to remove any of the mystery. Frequency? Duration? Periodicity/repeatability? Any characteristics whatsoever? Not a single useful property is mentioned in the article. In fact, apparently it's not even certain that it's not an artifact.
Actually, the whole thing is a rather weird: not only do they not give any details whatsoever, but I find it difficult to countenance that a scientist would talk about a "radio wave" rather than a "signal" or "emission" in this context. Speaking from my background as a co-investigator on the Planetary Radio Astronomy experiment on Voyager, the word "wave" is usually reserved for theoretical treatments in published papers.
Anyway, I guess we just have to wait for the upcoming issue of "Planetary and Space Science" to see what the article is really talking about.
Re:"Mysterious wave" (Score:5, Informative)
an article with considerably more explanation, including that they are investigating through actual simulation whether it could be an artefact of the instrument.
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and the cold fiddeling after the announcement
(science sells)
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See this excellent VLF/ELF site [www.vlf.it] for more info regarding the world below 100kHz.
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You mean in the context of "Big Hand
I knew it.... (Score:2)
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How long 'till proof of life? (Score:4, Insightful)
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The answer is in genesis (Score:5, Insightful)
My point is, we may still be missing something important and fundamental. That's what makes science so interesting. There is always something else to discover.
In Dawkins' book, The Blind Watchmaker, he makes reference to the work of another biologist whose name escapes me at the moment. But that guy's theory is that silicate crystals in soft clay are the necessary to get early life going. The theory goes like this: imagine a river with clay at the bottom. The clay forms microscopic crystals, which sometimes catch and constrain amino acids and other building blocks, like stuff getting stuck in the strainer in your sink.
As the crystals grow, they sometimes "empty the strainer" basically spitting out these now larger strands of amino acids. The strands and structures flow further down the river and inevitably get stuck in another crystal. There they grow larger and eventually get spit out. The process repeats all the way down the river.
At the mouth of the river, you've got billions of different pre-biotic experiments washing out into the sea. Just by chance, one of those experiments is able to reproduce itself. Life is unstoppable at that point.
So what I'm getting at is this: we keep finding *some* of the building blocks, but we aren't finding them arranged the correct way. A static sea (maybe even with hydrothermal vents) on Titan or Europa or Mars may be able to support current Earth life, but it may not be able to spark that all-important genesis event.
On the other hand, early Mars may have been perfect for this.
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A Simpler Origin for Life
BY ROBERT SHAPIRO
Energy-driven networks of small molecules may be more likely
first steps for life than the commonly held idea of the sudden
emergence of large self-replicating molecules such as RNA.
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No, it's not a mystery at all, you heathen. The answer is stated very clearly in Genesis.
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Fear it... (Score:1)
"They found us, time to launch the interstellar planet destroying device - they have WMD's... somewhere... and oil!"
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Few people want to admit this, but I'm pretty much convinced that we're alone in the galaxy, primarily because of the Fermi Paradox [wikipedia.org]. Specifically, the argument that it takes a "relatively" short time (on galactic scales) for a space-faring civilization to fill up a galaxy, even at sublight speeds, when you factor in geometric progression. If intelligent life was common, one would've filled up the galaxy by now and we wouldn't even exist.
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Assuming that, on a Universal time-scale, life elsewhere started around the same time as life here, there's no way...
Er, why would you assume that? The earth is 4.5 billion years old. The galaxy is 13 billion years old. It take about 5 million years (give or take) to fill up a galaxy. Five million years is nothing in the scheme of things.
After all, we haven't managed a colony on our own moon yet, much less on other planets or planets in other solar systems.
We've gone from stone tablets to space tr
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You mean, we've gone back to space travel. You're forgetting the previous 25,000 and 12,000 years ago when the pyramids were built, and about the cycle of civilizations - they build up, peak and bottom out, roughly half of the Earth's precission wobble, ~ 13k years.
--
Mind NOT Space, is the final frontier. Time is just a dimension of the mind.
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You're assuming that alien life would want to cover the galaxy. Perhaps the sane choice of any evolved civilization is population control?
It only takes one civilization. They're ALL uninterested in expansion, across billions of years? Also, even if they want to do population control, that doesn't preclude sending out AI self-replicating probes. But where are they?
Perhaps we will be the first?
That's another way of saying we're alone in the galaxy.
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Well... (Score:1)
Works here on earth too (Score:3, Interesting)
I do this myself on earth a lot. It's lot of fun to experiment.
In the past month, I was able to bounce a radio wave of approximately 20 meters to 40 meters in length from California to Hawaii [wa5znu.org], Mexico [wa5znu.org], Australia [wa5znu.org], the Bering Sea [wa5znu.org], Pacific Islands [wa5znu.org], Vladivostok [wa5znu.org], Khabarosk [wa5znu.org] (Russia 20km from Chinese border, where they had the chemical spill [google.com] a couple of years ago), and South Africa [wa5znu.org].
Some of this was with off-on keying of an RF carrier, and some with digital-signal processing software running on Linux (both extremely weak signal [pe2pe.eu] modes originally designed for bouncing signals off the Moon, and more conversational [wa5znu.org] modes.)
Oceans of water? *Yawn* (Score:2)
Saturn Influences (Score:2, Informative)
A potential problem, especially if they were scanning the lower frequencies, is the probable contamination by Saturn's scattered light
wait... (Score:5, Insightful)
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Oh, puh-lease! That approach is so pre-9/11.
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Radio Waves.....? (Score:1)
Just one step closer (Score:2)
Bad science from CBC News (Score:2)
I'm thinking... (Score:2, Funny)
Nah... (Score:2)
All these worlds are yours... (Score:3, Funny)
My god.. (Score:1)
Re:My god.. Cassini (Score:1)