NASA only needs a single grain of ice to detect alien life in our solar system, study shows

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Spacecraft flying through ice plumes in space could help scientists spot alien life — even if it’s only tiny bits of a cell in a few grains of ice, lab experiments have revealed for the first time.

If alien life resides on Saturn’s moon Enceladus or Jupiter’s Europa, enormous geysers blasting out of the moons and into space are currently the most accessible way to find evidence of it. As recent studies of Enceladus have shown, these powerful plumes originate from each moon’s vast subsurface ocean and spew out into space via cracks in their icy shells, ferrying ice grains that scientists think could be infused with bacterial cells and other organic molecules. Spacecraft flying through these plumes can then identify signs of life that may be encrusted in the ice, the new research shows.

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