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Acetylene Based Life on Titan?

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."

17 of 272 comments (clear)

  1. Farts for dinner? by jkc120 · · Score: 5, Funny

    Any intelligent life form that eats farts should be feared. That is all.

    --
    "I drank what?" -Socrates
    1. Re:Farts for dinner? by Froggy · · Score: 5, Funny

      Any intelligent life form that eats farts should be feared. That is all.

      Any Slashdot poster that farts acetylene is to be feared. From as far away as possible.

      --
      It is a woman's prerogative to change other people's minds.
    2. Re:Farts for dinner? by TelJanin · · Score: 4, Funny

      I thought honey was bee barf (not in here mister, this is a Mercedes).

    3. Re:Farts for dinner? by Jeremi · · Score: 4, Interesting
      honey (the piss of bees)


      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.

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
  2. Life of Titan by Tesral · · Score: 5, Funny
    Well, it is possible. Life Jim, but not as we know it. What it does bring up is the star system with nothing but giant planets might have moons with life. Hey, it could happen.

    Now if we could only be successful in finding intelligent life in Washington DC

    --
    Garry AKA -Phoenix- Rising Above the Flames
    Si hoc legere scis nimium eruditionis habes
  3. life on titan by foobari · · Score: 5, Funny

    Excited missionaries are pulling out their cold weather gear.

    1. Re:life on titan by TheGavster · · Score: 4, Funny

      Missionaries on Titan can only end in tears:

      "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!"

      --
      "Because Science" is one step from "Because old book". Try "Because of my experiment testing my falsifiable assertion".
    2. Re:life on titan by mormop · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Or it could have been touched by his noodly appendage

      --
      Hmmmmmm..... Deep fried and look like Squirrel.
  4. What is life, anyway? by darkmeridian · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Reading the article makes we wonder exactly what life is, anyway. It sounds as though we only require chemical conversion. What if there is a big rock that serves as a catalyst for this conversion of acetylene and hydrogen to methane. Would we think of that as a life form? Or would we require reproduction? Would reproduction be possible in this slow-motion frozen gel we find on Titan?

    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.

    --
    A NYC lawyer blogs. http://www.chuangblog.com/
    1. Re:What is life, anyway? by Compuser · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Life is:
      1. Ability to store information.
      2. Ability to process stored information to make
      replicas of oneself.
      3. Metabolism (to power the above).

    2. Re:What is life, anyway? by MidnightBrewer · · Score: 4, Insightful

      A quick trip to dictionary.com yielded this answer:

      "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.

      --
      "Give a man fire, and he'll be warm for a day; set a man on fire, and he'll be warm for the rest of his life
    3. Re:What is life, anyway? by JanneM · · Score: 5, Insightful

      A nice definition of life is something like "Active maintenance of self in the face of entropy". In other words, something that actively (and successfully) keeps itself functioning and stable even though the vicissitudes of existence constantly try to tear you down.

      Or, shorter, if you fight entropy you're alive. If you don't, you aren't.

      --
      Trust the Computer. The Computer is your friend.
  5. I wonder... by Spy+der+Mann · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Suppose there is intelligent life in there, what will they think of earth creatures?

    "Amazing! The third planet creatures support temperatures so high that none of the titan lifeforms could withstand. Let's call them extremophiles".

    Kinda makes you think...

  6. Original Article (long) by Greg+Hullender · · Score: 5, Informative
    Here's a link to the original NASA article by Grinspoon and others. It's pretty long (and part of a longer set of papers) so you might just search for "Titan" and go from there. However, if you have the time, it's fascinating reading, and it does have cool pictures. :-)

    --Greg

  7. Further study needed? by jacks+smirking+reven · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Who elsewould like to see 10 billion taken out of that moon landing money and put towards a few swarms probes to Titan to confirm this. Something to researhc this, and the JIMO mission are what i'd really pushed up schedule. Life outside our planet is the type of scientific and philisophical question that we should make all strides to answering. Jupites moons and Titan are the only places we essentially have left in our immediate solar system that might contain life. We really owe it to ourselves to research these to their final conclusion. I'd be happy to expand humanity into the solar system once we know we're not the only thing on it.

  8. Re:Acetylene *IS* Organic.... by k98sven · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Therefore, to expect the life on another planet may be complex-molecule-based instead of simple-carbon-based is feasible.

    "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.

  9. The Bigger Question by lcreech · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Is the impact on religion. The 7th day and so forth. Like Copernicus and Gallileo popping the churches/government bubble isn't pleasent and because of the current polical atmosphere, these times are no exception.

    Not anonymous because I am not afraid, though I may regret it in the near term.