Miniaturised Instrumentation for the Detection of Biosignatures in Ocean Worlds of the Solar System

被引:3
|
作者
Chela-Flores, Julian [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Abdus Salam Int Ctr Theoret Phys, Trieste, Italy
[2] Fdn Inst Estudios Avanzados, IDEA, Caracas, Venezuela
来源
FRONTIERS IN SPACE TECHNOLOGIES | 2021年 / 2卷
关键词
habitability; Ocean worlds; miniaturisation of mass spectrometers; stable isotope geochemistry; sulphur geochemistry; JUpiter ICy moons Explorer mission; Europa Clipper; terrestrial analogies; GAS MASS-SPECTROMETER; CHEMICAL-COMPOSITION; LAKE UNTERSEE; SULFURIC-ACID; EVOLUTION; EUROPA; VENUS; WATER; EXPLORATION; MISSION;
D O I
10.3389/frspt.2021.703809
中图分类号
V [航空、航天];
学科分类号
08 ; 0825 ;
摘要
This review of miniaturised instrumentation is motivated by the ongoing and forthcoming exploration of the confirmed, or candidate ocean worlds of the Solar System. It begins with a section on the evolution of instrumentation itself, ranging from the early efforts up to the current rich-heritage miniaturised mass spectrometers approved for missions to the Jovian system. The geochemistry of sulphur stable isotopes was introduced for life detection at the beginning of the present century. Miniaturised instruments allow the measurement of geochemical biosignatures with their underlying biogenic coding, which are more robust after death than cellular organic molecules. The role of known stable sulphur isotope fractionation by sulphate-reducing bacteria is discussed. Habitable ocean worlds are discussed, beginning with analogies from the first ocean world known in the Solar System that has always being available for scientific exploration, our own. Instrumentation can allow the search for biosignatures, not only on the icy Galilean moons, but also beyond. Observed sulphur fractionation on Earth suggests a testable "Sulphur Hypothesis", namely throughout the Solar System chemoautotrophy, past or present, has left, or are leaving biosignatures codified in sulphur fractionations. A preliminary feasible test is provided with a discussion of a previously formulated "Sulphur Dilemma": It was the Galileo mission that forced it upon us, when the Europan sulphur patches of non-ice surficial elements were discovered. Biogenic fractionations up to and beyond delta 34S = -70 parts per thousand denote biogenic, rather than inorganic processes, which are measurable with the available high sensitivity miniaturised mass spectrometers. Finally, we comment on the long-term exploration of ocean worlds in the neighbourhood of the gas and ice giants.
引用
收藏
页数:11
相关论文
共 25 条
  • [1] Ocean Worlds In Our Solar System
    Castillo-Rogez, Julie C.
    Kalousova, Klara
    ELEMENTS, 2022, 18 (03) : 161 - 166
  • [2] Key Technologies and Instrumentation for Subsurface Exploration of Ocean Worlds
    Dachwald, Bernd
    Ulamec, Stephan
    Postberg, Frank
    Sohl, Frank
    de Vera, Jean-Pierre
    Waldmann, Christoph
    Lorenz, Ralph D.
    Zacny, Kris A.
    Hellard, Hugo
    Biele, Jens
    Rettberg, Petra
    SPACE SCIENCE REVIEWS, 2020, 216 (05)
  • [3] Onboard Science Instrument Autonomy for the Detection of Microscopy Biosignatures on the Ocean Worlds Life Surveyor
    Wronkiewicz, Mark
    Lee, Jake
    Mandrake, Lukas
    Lightholder, Jack
    Doran, Gary
    Mauceri, Steffen
    Kim, Taewoo
    Oborny, Nathan
    Schibler, Thomas
    Nadeau, Jay
    Wallace, James K.
    Moorjani, Eshaan
    Lindensmith, Chris
    PLANETARY SCIENCE JOURNAL, 2024, 5 (01):
  • [4] Key Technologies and Instrumentation for Subsurface Exploration of Ocean Worlds
    Bernd Dachwald
    Stephan Ulamec
    Frank Postberg
    Frank Sohl
    Jean-Pierre de Vera
    Christoph Waldmann
    Ralph D. Lorenz
    Kris A. Zacny
    Hugo Hellard
    Jens Biele
    Petra Rettberg
    Space Science Reviews, 2020, 216
  • [5] Analog Experiments for the Identification of Trace Biosignatures in Ice Grains from Extraterrestrial Ocean Worlds
    Klenner, Fabian
    Postberg, Frank
    Hillier, Jon
    Khawaja, Nozair
    Reviol, Rene
    Stolz, Ferdinand
    Cable, Morgan L.
    Abel, Bernd
    Noelle, Lenz
    ASTROBIOLOGY, 2020, 20 (02) : 179 - 189
  • [6] Modeling a class of thermal ice probes for accessing the solar system's ocean worlds
    Durka, Michael J.
    Smith, Miles W. E.
    Ullman, Michael J.
    Cassler, Bailey
    Otis, Richard
    Cwik, Thomas A.
    Hockman, Benjamin J.
    Barry, Matthew M.
    ACTA ASTRONAUTICA, 2022, 193 : 483 - 495
  • [7] Electrochemistry for Life Detection on Ocean Worlds
    Thomson, Seamus D.
    Quinn, Richard C.
    Ricco, Antonio J.
    Koehne, Jessica E.
    CHEMELECTROCHEM, 2020, 7 (03) : 614 - 623
  • [8] Explorer of Enceladus and Titan (E2T): Investigating ocean worlds' evolution and habitability in the solar system
    Mitri, Giuseppe
    Postberg, Frank
    Soderblom, Jason M.
    Wurz, Peter
    Tortora, Paolo
    Abel, Bernd
    Barnes, Jason W.
    Berga, Marco
    Carrasco, Nathalie
    Coustenis, Athena
    Paul de Vera, Jean Pierre
    D'Ottavio, Andrea
    Ferri, Francesca
    Hayes, Alexander G.
    Hayne, Paul O.
    Hillier, Jon K.
    Kempf, Sascha
    Lebreton, Jean-Pierre
    Lorenz, Ralph D.
    Martelli, Andrea
    Orosei, Roberto
    Petropoulos, Anastassios E.
    Reh, Kim
    Schmidt, Juergen
    Sotin, Christophe
    Srama, Ralf
    Tobie, Gabriel
    Vorburger, Audrey
    Vuitton, Veronique
    Wong, Andre
    Zannoni, Marco
    PLANETARY AND SPACE SCIENCE, 2018, 155 : 73 - 90
  • [9] Extended Longevity Photoactivated Surface-Enhanced Raman Spectroscopy for the Detection of Biosignatures on Icy Worlds and Martian Polar Caps
    Vitkova, Aria
    Vu, Tuan H.
    Lambert, James
    JOURNAL OF RAMAN SPECTROSCOPY, 2025,
  • [10] Convergent evolution and the search for biosignatures within the solar system and beyond
    Martinez, Claudio L. Flores
    ACTA ASTRONAUTICA, 2015, 116 : 394 - 402