BRIEF: Oceans on Saturn’s Moon May Be Habitable For Microbes

Artist’s concept of hydrothermal activity on Enceladus.
NASA/JPL-Caltech
(Inside Science) -- Enceladus, the sixth largest moon of Saturn, has a surface area about the size of Mexico and is mostly covered with ice. During a flyby mission in 2015, the Cassini spacecraft dove into a plume of spray shooting out of cracks near the moon’s south polar region. Scientists have now analyzed the contents of the plume and found molecules that are a signature of deep-sea habitats on Earth that support microbes.
The group reports the results in a paper
The Cassini spacecraft, which launched in 1997, reached Saturn’s orbit in 2004. It is now undertaking the final phase of a mission that started in December 2016 to explore Saturn’s rings. The last flyby of the planet is scheduled for April 19. The project will end when the spacecraft falls into Saturn’s atmosphere, probably around September of this year.