Scientists recreated the 'alien crystals' thought to line the lakes of Saturn's moon Titan
Mike Wehner @MikeWehner
June 25th, 2019 at 3:11 PM
Hanging out on the shores of a lake here on Earth is often a nice, relaxing way to spend an afternoon, but the same most definitely isnt true on Saturns moon Titan. Aside from the incredibly frigid temperatures, scientists now believe that lakes on the icy moon are likely lined with alien crystals that wed never see here at home.
The research, which was presented this week at the 2019 Astrobiology Science Conference, reveals that the ultra-cold temperatures on Titans surface cause compounds like butane and acetylene to freeze together and form crystals. Such crystals are never seen in nature here on Earth, but scientists managed to create their own in carefully-controller laboratory conditions.
To simulate what may be a completely natural process on Titans surface, researchers filled a super-cooled chamber with the kinds of compounds that we believe are plentiful on the moon, such as methane and ethane. These hydrocarbons exist as gasses here on Earth, but on Titan its cold enough for them to freeze into a solid and, it seems, form some very special crystals.
The researchers observed the creation of crystals that theyd never seen before, including a co-crystal made of both benzene and ethane, as well as a co-crystal of acetylene and butane.
More:
https://bgr.com/2019/06/25/titan-alien-crystals-saturn-moon/