What Saturns most mysterious moon could teach us about the origins of life Elizabeth Turtle

Picture a world
with a variety of landforms.

It has a dense atmosphere

within which winds
sweep across its surface

and rain falls.

It has mountains and plains,

rivers, lakes and seas,

sand dunes and some impact craters.

Sounds like Earth, right?

This is Titan.

In August 1981,

Voyager 2 captured this image
of Saturn’s largest moon.

The Voyager missions have traveled
farther than ever before,

making the solar system and beyond

part of our geography.

But this image, this hazy moon

was a stark reminder
of just how much mystery remained.

We learned an exponential amount
as the Voyagers flew by it,

and yet we had no idea
what lay beneath this atmospheric blanket.

Was there an icy surface with landforms
like those of the other moons

that had been observed
at Saturn and Jupiter?

Or perhaps simply a vast
global ocean of liquid methane?

Shrouded by the obscuring haze,

Titan’s surface was
a huge, outstanding mystery

that Cassini-Huygens,
an orbiter lander pair launched in 1997,

was designed to solve.

After arrival in 2004,

the early images Cassini sent back
of Titan’s surface

only heightened the allure.

It took months for us to understand
what we were seeing on the surface,

to determine, for example,

that the dark stripes,

which were initially so unrecognizable
that we referred to them as cat scratches,

were actually dunes made of organic sand.

Over the course of the 13 years
Cassini spent studying Saturn

and its rings and moons,

we had the privilege

of going from knowing almost nothing
about the surface of Titan

to understanding its geology,

the role the atmosphere plays
in shaping its surface,

and even hints of what lies
deep beneath that surface.

Indeed, Titan is one
of several ocean worlds,

moons in the cold outer solar system

beyond the orbits of Mars
and the asteroid belt

with immense liquid water oceans
beneath their surfaces.

Titan’s interior ocean may have
more than 10 times as much liquid water

as all of the Earth’s rivers, lakes,
seas and oceans combined.

And at Titan, there are also
exotic lakes and seas

of liquid methane and ethane
on the surface.

Ocean worlds are some
of the most fascinating places

in the solar system,

and we have only
just begun to explore them.

This is Dragonfly.

At the Johns Hopkins
Applied Physics Laboratory,

we’re building this mission
for NASA’s new Frontiers program.

Scheduled to launch in 2026
and reach Titan in 2034,

Dragonfly is a rotorcraft lander,

similar in size to the Mars rovers
or about the size of a small car.

Titan’s dense atmosphere,
combined with its low gravity,

make it a great place to fly,

and that’s exactly
what Dragonfly is designed to do.

Technically an octocopter,

Dragonfly is a mobile laboratory
that can fly from place to place

taking all of its scientific
instruments with it.

Dragonfly will investigate Titan
in a truly unique way,

studying details
of its weather and geology,

and even picking up
samples from the surface

to learn what they’re made of.

All told, Dragonfly will spend
about three years exploring Titan,

measuring its detailed chemistry,

observing the atmosphere
and how it interacts with the surface,

and even listening for earthquakes,

or technically titanquakes,
in Titan’s crust.

The Dragonfly team,

hundreds of people across
North America and around the world,

is hard at work
on the design for this mission,

developing the rotorcraft,
its autonomous navigation system

and its instrumentation,

all of which will need to work together
to make science measurements

on the surface of Titan.

Dragonfly is the next step
in our exploration

of this fascinating natural laboratory.

In flying by, Voyager hinted
at the possibilities.

In orbiting Saturn for over a decade

and descending through Titan’s atmosphere,

Cassini and Huygens pulled
Titan’s veil back a bit further.

Dragonfly will live
in the Titan environment,

where, so far, our only close-up view

is this image the Huygens probe
took in January 2005.

In many ways, Titan is the closest
known analogue we have to the early Earth,

the Earth before life developed here.

From Cassini-Huygens' measurements,

we know that the ingredients for life,

at least life as we know it,

have existed on Titan,

and Dragonfly will be fully immersed
within this alien environment,

looking for compounds similar to those

that might have supported
the development of life here on Earth

and teaching us about
the habitability of other worlds.

Habitability is a fascinating concept.

What’s necessary to make
an environment suitable to host life,

whether life as we know it here on Earth,

or perhaps exotic life that has developed
under very different conditions?

The possibility of life elsewhere

has inspired human imagination
and exploration throughout history.

On a grand scale,

it’s why the ocean worlds
in the outer solar system

have become such
important targets for study.

It’s the “what if”
that drives human exploration.

We don’t know how chemistry
took the step to biology here on Earth,

but similar chemical processes
may have happened on Titan,

where organic molecules
have had the opportunity

to mix with liquid water at the surface.

Has organic synthesis progressed
under these conditions?

And if so, how far?

We don’t know … yet.

What we will learn from Dragonfly,
this fundamentally human endeavor,

is tantalizing.

It’s a search for building blocks,
foundations, chemical steps

like those that ultimately
led to life on Earth.

We’re not sure exactly
what we will find when we get to Titan,

but that’s exactly why we’re going.

In 1994, Carl Sagan wrote,

“On Titan, the molecules
that have been raining down

like manna from heaven
for the last four billion years

might still be there,

largely unaltered, deep-frozen,
awaiting the chemists from Earth.”

We are those chemists.

Dragonfly is a search
for greater understanding,

not just of Titan and the mysteries
of our solar system,

but of our own origins.

Thank you.

想象一个
拥有各种地貌的世界。

它有一个稠密的大气层,

在其中
风吹过它的表面

并下雨。

它有山脉和平原,

河流,湖泊和海洋,

沙丘和一些撞击坑。

听起来像地球,对吧?

这是泰坦。

1981 年 8 月,

航海者 2 号拍摄了这张
土星最大卫星的图像。

航海者号任务
比以往任何时候都走得更远,

使太阳系和地球以外的

地方成为我们地理的一部分。

但是这个图像,这个朦胧的月亮

清楚地提醒我们还有多少神秘。

当航海者号飞过它时,我们学到了指数级的数量

,但我们不
知道这层大气毯下面是什么。

是否有与在土星和木星观测到
的其他卫星相似的冰冷表面

或者可能只是一个巨大的
全球液态甲烷海洋?

被朦胧的雾霾笼罩,

泰坦的表面是
一个巨大的、突出的谜团


1997 年发射的一对轨道着陆器卡西尼-惠更斯

号旨在解决这个谜团。

在 2004 年抵达后,

卡西尼号发回泰坦表面的早期图像

只会增加吸引力。

我们花了几个月的时间来
了解我们在表面上看到的东西

,例如,

确定那些最初难以辨认
以至于我们称之为猫抓痕

的深色条纹实际上是由有机沙制成的沙丘。

在卡西尼号研究土星

及其环和卫星的 13 年中,

我们

有幸从
对土卫六表面几乎一无所知

到了解它的地质、

大气
在塑造其表面的作用,

甚至是暗示
在那表面之下的深处。

事实上,土卫六
是几个海洋世界之一,它们是位于火星轨道以外

寒冷的太阳系外的卫星,

以及在其表面下

有巨大液态水海洋的小行星带

土卫六内部海洋
的液态水

量可能是地球上所有河流、湖泊、
海洋和海洋总和的 10 倍以上。

在土卫六,地表也有
奇特的湖泊和

液态甲烷和
乙烷海洋。

海洋世界是太阳系
中最迷人的地方

之一,

而我们才
刚刚开始探索它们。

这是蜻蜓。

在约翰霍普金斯
应用物理实验室,

我们正在
为 NASA 的新前沿计划构建这项任务。 蜻蜓

计划于 2026 年发射
并于 2034 年到达土卫六,它

是一种旋翼着陆器,

大小与火星探测器相似,
或与一辆小型汽车相当。

土卫六稠密的大气层,
加上它的低重力,

使它成为飞行的好地方,

而这
正是蜻蜓计划的目的。

从技术上讲,蜻蜓是一个八旋翼飞行器,

是一个移动实验室
,可以带着它所有的科学仪器从一个地方飞到另一个地方

蜻蜓
将以一种真正独特的方式调查泰坦,

研究
其天气和地质的细节,

甚至
从地表采集样本

以了解它们的构成。

总而言之,蜻蜓号将花费
大约三年的时间探索土卫六,

测量其详细的化学成分,

观察大气
及其与地表的相互作用,

甚至监听

土卫六地壳中的地震或技术上的泰坦地震。

Dragonfly 团队


北美和世界各地的数百人组成,他们

正在
努力设计这项任务,

开发旋翼飞机
、自主导航系统

和仪器,

所有这些都需要
共同努力进行科学测量

在泰坦的表面。

蜻蜓
是我们

探索这个迷人的自然实验室的下一步。

在飞过时,航海者号
暗示了可能性。

卡西尼号和惠更斯号绕土星运行了十多年

并穿过土卫六的大气层,


土卫六的面纱拉得更远一些。

蜻蜓将生活
在土卫

六环境中,到目前为止,我们唯一的近距离观察

是惠更斯探测器
在 2005 年 1 月拍摄的这张照片。

在许多方面,土卫六是
我们所拥有的与早期地球(

之前的地球)最接近的已知类似物 生活在这里发展。

从卡西尼-惠更斯的测量中,

我们知道生命的成分,

至少是我们所知道的生命,

已经存在于土卫六上

,蜻蜓将完全沉浸
在这个外星环境中,

寻找与

可能
支持 地球上生命的发展,

并教会我们
其他世界的可居住性。

可居住性是一个迷人的概念。

无论是我们在地球上所知道的生命,还是

在非常不同的条件下发展起来的外来生命,要创造一个适合承载生命的环境,需要什么?

其他地方生命的可能性

激发了人类
在整个历史上的想象力和探索。

在宏大的范围内,

这就是为什么外太阳系的海洋世界

已成为如此
重要的研究目标。

推动人类探索的是“假设”

我们不知道化学是如何
在地球上向生物学迈进的,

但类似的化学过程
可能发生在土卫六上,

在那里有机分子
有机会

与地表的液态水混合。

有机合成是
在这些条件下进行的吗?

如果是这样,多远?

我们不知道……还没有。

我们将从蜻蜓
这项基本的人类努力中学到的东西

是诱人的。

这是对构建模块、
基础、化学步骤的探索,

就像那些最终
导致地球上存在生命的步骤一样。

我们不确定
当我们到达泰坦时会发现什么,

但这正是我们要去的原因。

1994 年,卡尔·萨根写道:

“在土卫

六上,过去 40 亿年来像甘露一样从天而降的分子

可能仍然在那里,

基本上没有改变,被深度冻结,
等待着地球的化学家。”

我们就是那些化学家。

蜻蜓是
对更深入理解的探索,

不仅是对泰坦和
我们太阳系的奥秘,

而且是对我们自己的起源。

谢谢你。