If alien life exists on Europa, we might find it in the hydrothermal vents

Low-temperature hydrothermal vents can survive on the dark ocean floors of moons like Jupiter’s Europa for billions of years, new computer simulations have shown, as astrobiologists try to understand whether these alien oceans could be habitable.

Hydrothermal vents are both a source of chemical energy and heat, and are one of the possible sites for the origin of life in earth. Planetary scientists have theorized that hydrothermal vents at the bottom of the oceans beneath the ice on the moons of Jupiter like Europe and GanymedeAND Saturn SATELLITE Enceladusit could help warm those oceans and initiate the biochemistry of life.

The problem is that the modeling of these vents has focused on the extremely hot ones – the “black smokers” powered by volcanic activity. While these super-hot holes can absorb energy from Earth’s hot core, icy moons do not have hot cores, meaning there has been some question as to whether such channels can survive long enough to create long-term conditions for life. .

(Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Southwest Research Institute)

However, superheated vents are not the dominant form of venting in Earth’s oceans. On Earth, a much larger volume of water passes through cooler vents.

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