EPISODE · Oct 6, 2006 · 3 MIN
Understanding Titan's tholins
from ESApod, audio and video from space · host European Space Agency ESA
Before the 2005 Huygens mission to Titan, ground-based observations, and the first Voyager fly-by, had revealed a nitrogen-and-methane-dominated atmosphere, suitable for the formation of carbon-rich compounds. Additional data from Huygens show that the solid particles in Titan's atmosphere are made of complex organic materials whose properties are very much like those of tholins created in laboratories. However, the amount of carbon measured in the moon's methane appears to indicate that the methane is probably not of biological origin. But that does not exclude the possibility of some kind of life. "We're but one step away from imagining that the environment there could have seen the apparition of life," says Dr François Raulin, Huygens interdisciplinary scientist at the University of Paris.ESApod video programme
What this episode covers
Conditions on Titan may have been suitable for the formation of essential building blocks for life.
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Understanding Titan's tholins
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