Ground-based detection of a cloud of methanol from Enceladus: When is a biomarker not a biomarker?
E. Drabek-Maunder, J. Greaves, H. J. Fraser, D. L. Clements, L.-N., Alconcel

TL;DR
This study reports the detection of methanol around Enceladus, exploring whether it is a direct vent product or formed through chemical processes in the neutral torus, with implications for interpreting biomarkers.
Contribution
It presents the first detection of methanol in the Enceladus environment and analyzes its origin, challenging assumptions about biomarkers in extraterrestrial settings.
Findings
Methanol detected at 5.9 sigma confidence with specific velocity offset.
Methanol abundance exceeds that near vents, indicating chemical processing.
Two scenarios for methanol origin are consistent with observations.
Abstract
Saturn's moon Enceladus has vents emerging from a sub-surface ocean, offering unique probes into the liquid environment. These vents drain into the larger neutral torus in orbit around Saturn. We present a methanol (CH3OH) detection observed with IRAM 30-m from 2008 along the line-of-sight through Saturn's E-ring. Additionally, we also present supporting observations from the Herschel public archive of water (ortho-H2O; 1669.9 GHz) from 2012 at a similar elongation and line-of-sight. The CH3OH 5(1,1)-4(1,1) transition was detected at 5.9 sigma confidence. The line has 0.43 km/s width and is offset by +8.1 km/s in the moon's reference frame. Radiative transfer models allow for gas cloud dimensions from 1750 km up to the telescope beam diameter ~73000 km. Taking into account the CH3OH lifetime against solar photodissociation and the redshifted line velocity, there are two possible…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Isotope Analysis in Ecology · Space Exploration and Technology
