Time: 15:30 -
Room: ELSI-1 102 Mishima Hall
Title:
Habitability on ocean worlds tied to composition and orbital-thermal evolution
Speaker:
Melwani Daswani, Mohit (NASA JPL)
Abstract:
Composition and orbital-thermal evolution are key to understanding the
past and present habitability of ocean worlds in our solar system. The
bulk composition determines whether the ingredients necessary for life
to exist may be available. The orbital-thermal evolution of the ocean
world determines the temporal and spatial distribution of the
ingredients. Which ocean worlds are more habitable for life as we know
it?
Using thermodynamic phase relations and Gibbs free energy
minimization, I will show a model to identify and quantify the reactions
caused by thermal excursions, and the organic molecule and hydrocarbon
species (methane, ethane, lactate, glutarate, etc.) in fluids produced
in (and released from) the interiors of different ocean worlds.
Water-rock interactions lead to end products (organic molecules,
redox-sensitive species, minerals) that are fundamentally different
between ocean worlds with different orbital-thermal histories, notably
between ocean worlds that are probably differentiated (e.g. Europa) and
those that are probably not (e.g. Titan, Enceladus). Worlds that are
currently warmed are probably more habitable today, but worlds that
experienced high temperatures in the distant past were probably
habitable when life arose on Earth.