Jupiter’s moon Europa has plenty of oxygen to support life
Washington, October 9 : A new research has suggested that there may be plenty of oxygen available in the global ocean on Jupiter’s moon Europa to support life, in fact, a hundred times more oxygen than previously estimated.
The global ocean on Europa contains about twice the liquid water of all the Earth’s oceans combined.
The chances for life there have been uncertain, because Europa’s ocean lies beneath several miles of ice, which separates it from the production of oxygen at the surface by energetic charged particles.
Without oxygen, life could conceivably exist at hot springs in the ocean floor using exotic metabolic chemistries, based on sulfur or the production of methane.
However, it is not certain whether the ocean floor actually would provide the conditions for such life.
Therefore, a key question has been whether enough oxygen reaches the ocean to support the oxygen-based metabolic process that is most familiar to us.
An answer comes from considering the young age of Europa’s surface.
Its geology and the paucity of impact craters suggests that the top of the ice is continually reformed such that the current surface is only about 50 million years old, roughly 1 percent of the age of the solar system.
Richard Greenberg of the University of Arizona has considered three generic resurfacing processes: gradually laying fresh material on the surface; opening cracks which fill with fresh ice from below; and disrupting patches of surface in place and replacing them with fresh material.
Using estimates for the production of oxidizers at the surface, he finds that the delivery rate into the ocean is so fast that the oxygen concentration could exceed that of the Earth’s oceans in only a few million years.
According to Greenberg, the concentrations of oxygen would be great enough to support not only microorganisms, but also “macrofauna”, that is, more complex animal-like organisms which have greater oxygen demands.
The continual supply of oxygen could support roughly 3 billion kilograms of macrofauna, assuming similar oxygen demands to terrestrial fish. (ANI)