Comparative geochemistry analysis between the ocean of Enceladus and the
aqueous ocean on Earth during the Snowball Period and its interaction
with the atmosphere in a hypothetical destabilization of the ice crust.
- Katherine Villavicencio Valero,
- Emilio Ramirez Juidias
Abstract
Enceladus is one of the moons of Saturn that has caught the attention of
scientists due to the potential for harboring life. It has a stratified
internal structure, below its ice shell has been detected an ocean layer
which material is expelled through the jets from the plumes located in
the south pole. The ice layer could limit the exchange of material
between the ocean and the atmosphere. We present a model of the thermal
atmospheric evolution with the presence of clouds, in order to
understand, what would happen in the ice crust if the atmosphere has a
small greenhouse effect. That change in the atmosphere was present
during the Snowball period on Earth, where some molecules from the
primitive ocean were liberated into the atmosphere. Those molecules
probably are present in the ocean on Enceladus. We also present a
comparative geochemical analysis of the molecules present in the ocean
of Enceladus and the ones which were present in the ocean of Earth
during the Snowball period in order to predict if Enceladus is in a
primitive evolutionary stage and if these molecules could interact with
the atmosphere if the ice crust has a destabilization.