Oxidation Processes Diversify the Metabolic Menu on Enceladus
Christine Ray, Christopher R. Glein, J. Hunter Waite, Ben Teolis, Tori, Hoehler, Julie A. Huber, Jonathan Lunine, Frank Postberg

TL;DR
This study models chemical processes in Enceladus' ocean to assess the potential for diverse microbial life supported by oxidants produced through radiolytic and abiotic reactions.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed chemical modeling of oxidant production and energy availability supporting microbial metabolism in Enceladus' ocean.
Findings
Oxidants could support microbial life by providing sufficient energy.
Multiple metabolic pathways could be energetically feasible.
Enceladus' ocean may host diverse microbial communities.
Abstract
The Cassini mission to the Saturn system discovered a plume of ice grains and water vapor erupting from cracks on the icy surface of the satellite Enceladus. This moon has a global ocean in contact with a rocky core beneath its icy exterior, making it a promising location to search for evidence of extraterrestrial life in the solar system. The previous detection of H in the plume indicates that there is free energy available for methanogenesis, the metabolic reaction of H with CO to form methane and water. Additional metabolic pathways could provide sources of energy in Enceladus' ocean, but require the use of other oxidants that have not been detected in the plume. Here, we perform chemical modeling to determine how the production of radiolytic O and HO, and abiotic redox chemistry in the ocean and rocky core, contribute to chemical disequilibria that could…
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