WEBVTT FILE 1 00:00:03.170 --> 00:00:06.807 Where else might life exist in our solar system? That’s a 2 00:00:06.807 --> 00:00:11.211 question that NASA scientists are trying to answer. An 3 00:00:11.211 --> 00:00:15.916 intriguing place we are studying is Saturn’s largest moon, Titan. 4 00:00:15.916 --> 00:00:19.152 It’s the only body in the solar system other than Earth to 5 00:00:19.152 --> 00:00:23.056 feature seas of liquid on its surface. But that liquid is 6 00:00:23.056 --> 00:00:26.393 methane instead of water. The cell membranes we have on Earth, 7 00:00:26.393 --> 00:00:32.032 part of our building blocks for life, could not form here. 8 00:00:32.032 --> 00:00:35.669 Previous computer simulations investigated which chemicals 9 00:00:35.669 --> 00:00:40.040 could be used to make cell-like membranes on Titan. It’s been 10 00:00:40.040 --> 00:00:44.044 calculated that this molecule, acrylonitrile, is the best 11 00:00:44.044 --> 00:00:48.148 candidate to form the most stable membranes. What’s 12 00:00:48.148 --> 00:00:51.785 exciting is that our team at NASA Goddard has now detected 13 00:00:51.785 --> 00:00:54.955 large amounts of this chemical in Titan’s atmosphere, using 14 00:00:54.955 --> 00:00:59.426 spectroscopic data from ALMA, the Atacama Large Millimeter/sub 15 00:00:59.426 --> 00:01:05.599 millimeter Array, located in Chile. And since Titan has rain, 16 00:01:05.599 --> 00:01:08.835 a significant amount may be reaching the surface and ending 17 00:01:08.835 --> 00:01:13.040 up in Titan’s vast lakes. More research is needed, but by 18 00:01:13.040 --> 00:01:16.043 definitively detecting this astrobiologically relevant 19 00:01:16.043 --> 00:01:19.513 molecule on Titan, we are another step closer to 20 00:01:19.513 --> 00:01:24.518 understanding how and where life could exist in our solar system.