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News

Space News: Saturn’s ocean moon Enceladus is able to support life − my research team is working out how to detect extraterrestrial cells there

 

Scientists could one day find traces of life on Enceladus, an ocean-covered moon orbiting Saturn. NASA/JPL-Caltech, CC BY-SA

Saturn has 146 confirmed moons – more than any other planet in the solar system – but one called Enceladus stands out. It appears to have the ingredients for life.

From 2004 to 2017, Cassini – a joint mission between NASA, the European Space Agency and the Italian Space Agency – investigated Saturn, its rings and moons. Cassini delivered spectacular findings. Enceladus, only 313 miles (504 kilometers) in diameter, harbors a liquid water ocean beneath its icy crust that spans the entire moon.

Geysers at the moon’s south pole shoot gas and ice grains formed from the ocean water into space.

Though the Cassini engineers didn’t anticipate analyzing ice grains that Enceladus was actively emitting, they did pack a dust analyzer on the spacecraft. This instrument measured the emitted ice grains individually and told researchers about the composition of the subsurface ocean.

As a planetary scientist and astrobiologist who studies ice grains from Enceladus, I’m interested in whether there is life on this or other icy moons. I also want to understand how scientists like me could detect it.

Ingredients for life

Just like Earth’s oceans, Enceladus’ ocean contains salt, most of which is sodium chloride, commonly known as table salt. The ocean also contains various carbon-based compounds, and it has a process called tidal heating that generates energy within the moon. Liquid water, carbon-based chemistry and energy are all key ingredients for life.

In 2023, I and others scientists found phosphate, another life-supporting compound, in ice grains originating from Enceladus’ ocean. Phosphate, a form of phosphorus, is vital for all life on Earth. It is part of DNA, cell membranes and bones. This was the first time that scientists detected this compound in an extraterrestrial water ocean.

Enceladus’ rocky core likely interacts with the water ocean through hydrothermal vents. These hot, geyserlike structures protrude from the ocean floor. Scientists predict that a similar setting may have been the birthplace of life on Earth.

A diagram showing the inside of a gray moon, which has a hot rocky core.
The interior of Saturn’s moon Enceladus. Surface: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Space Science Institute; interior: LPG-CNRS/U. Nantes/U. Angers. Graphic composition: ESA


Detecting potential life

As of now, nobody has ever detected life beyond Earth. But scientists agree that Enceladus is a very promising place to look for life. So, how do we go about looking?

In a paper published in March 2024, my colleagues and I conducted a laboratory test that simulated whether dust analyzer instruments on spacecraft could detect and identify traces of life in the emitted ice grains.

To simulate the detection of ice grains as dust analyzers in space record them, we used a laboratory setup on Earth. Using this setup, we injected a tiny water beam that contained bacterial cells into a vacuum, where the beam disintegrated into droplets. Each droplet contained, in theory, one bacterial cell.

Then, we shot a laser at the individual droplets, which created charged ions from the water and the cell compounds. We measured the charged ions using a technique called mass spectrometry. These measurements helped us predict what dust analyzer instruments on a spacecraft should find if they encountered a bacterial cell contained in an ice grain.

We found these instruments would do a good job identifying cellular material. Instruments designed to analyze single ice grains should be able to identify bacterial cells, even if there is only 0.01% of the constituents of a single cell in an ice grain from an Enceladus-like geyser.

The analyzers could pick up a number of potential signatures from cellular material, including amino acids and fatty acids. Detected amino acids represent either fragments of the cell’s proteins or metabolites, which are small molecules participating in chemical reactions within the cell. Fatty acids are fragments of lipids that make up the cell’s membranes.

In our experiments, we used a bacteria named Sphingopyxis alaskensis. Cells of this culture are extremely tiny – the same size as cells that might be able to fit into ice grains emitted from Enceladus. In addition to their small size, these cells like cold environments, and they need only a few nutrients to survive and grow, similar to how life adapted to the conditions in Enceladus’ ocean would probably be.

The specific dust analyzer on Cassini didn’t have the analytical capabilities to identify cellular material in the ice grains. However, scientists are already designing instruments with much greater capabilities for potential future Enceladus missions. Our experimental results will inform the planning and design of these instruments.

Future missions

Enceladus is one of the main targets for future missions from NASA and the European Space Agency. In 2022, NASA announced that a mission to Enceladus had the second-highest priority as they picked their next big missions – a Uranus mission had the highest priority.

The European agency recently announced that Enceladus is the top target for its next big mission. This mission would likely include a highly capable dust analyzer for ice grain analysis.

Enceladus isn’t the only moon with a liquid water ocean. Jupiter’s moon Europa also has an ocean that spans the entire moon underneath its icy crust. Ice grains on Europa float up above the surface, and some scientists think Europa may even have geysers like Enceladus that shoot grains into space. Our research will also help study ice grains from Europa.

NASA’s Europa Clipper mission will visit Europa in the coming years. Clipper is scheduled to launch in October 2024 and arrive at Jupiter in April 2030. One of the two mass spectrometers on the spacecraft, the SUrface Dust Analyzer, is designed for single ice grain analysis.

A metal instrument with a circular door open to reveal a mesh strainer designed to catch dust.
The SUrface Dust Analyzer instrument on Clipper will analyze ice grains from Jupiter’s moon Europa. NASA/CU Boulder/Glenn Asakawa

Our study demonstrates that this instrument will be able to find even tiny fractions of a bacterial cell, if present in only a few emitted ice grains.

With these space agencies’ near-future plans and the results of our study, the prospects of upcoming space missions visiting Enceladus or Europa are incredibly exciting. We now know that with current and future instrumentation, scientists should be able to find out whether there is life on any of these moons.The Conversation

Fabian Klenner, Postdoctoral Scholar in Earth and Space Sciences, University of Washington

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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Written by: Fabian Klenner, University of Washington
Published: 20 April 2024

Clearlake City Council approves AI policy, updated city manager contract

CLEARLAKE, Calif. — The Clearlake City Council on Thursday adopted a new policy regarding the city’s use of artificial intelligence, approved a new contract with the city manager and gave the go ahead for an application for gap funding for a new apartment project.

City Manager Alan Flora presented the new generative artificial intelligence, or AI, policy to the council, explaining that the technology is now making its way into all sorts of software being used by the city.

As an example, he said that the video system that the police department uses for its body cams and cars uses AI.

At a recent city managers conference, Flora said there was a lot of talk about the municipalities using AI which, from his perspective, can be both quite powerful and troubling.

He said AI can add value to the city’s work and getting a policy in place for staff is “a good step.”

The four-page policy, found in the staff report, includes a list of acceptable uses of generative AI, that includes creating an outline for written content, copying a document into a generative AI tool for the purposes of summarizing and/or querying it, suggesting writing improvements, learning about and exploring topics, analyzing different types of data, idea generation and research.

Requirements for use include staff being responsible for all outcomes of generative AI used for work purposes, conducting fact checks, providing attribution whenever generated content is published including images, opting out of data collection whenever possible, and not using generative AI to generate code or audio at this time.

With AI rapidly changing, Flora said the city will need to take a fresh look at the policy on a regular basis.

He said Mayor David Claffey probably knows more about AI than anyone else in the room, and he went over the proposed policy with Claffey ahead of time.

Flora said they had discussed having a review of the policy every couple of years, and he said he could go ahead and add that into the policy.

Councilmember Joyce Overton said that, because she expected AI to change so much so fast, the city policy needs to be reviewed every year, and she suggested it be done during the budget process.

Councilmemember Dirk Slooten said he wholeheartedly agreed. “We need to keep on top of it, definitely,” Slooten said, adding he also wanted an annual review.

“There are very few jurisdictions that are thinking like this,” said Claffey, who thanked Flora for putting the new policy together. “This is the way we need to be thinking.”

Claffey said there are so many great tools coming that will benefit small cities like Clearlake, and that they needed to give staff flexibility to try those tools.

Slooten moved to approve the policy with the addition to have it reviewed on a yearly basis. Overton seconded and the council approved the policy 5-0.

Also on Thursday, the council approved a new employment services agreement with Flora.

City Attorney Ryan Jones said Flora has been with the city for five years, twice as long as the average city manager tenure in California. He said that’s a testament to the longevity, consistency and stability in the city government.

Jones emphasized that the new contract did not change any of the fiscal aspects — Flora’s $16,342.05 a month salary, his benefits and other terms of the agreement — but rather extended Flora’s current three year contract by one year. It will now continue for another two years — rather than ending next year. Hopefully at that point the council will extend it again, Jones said.

The new contract also includes a provision requiring that terminating Flora without cause would require a 4/5th vote of the council for a period of year after the election of a new council member. Jones noted that termination for cause doesn’t require a 4/5th vote.

Councilman Russ Cremer moved to approve the updated contract, with Overton seconding.

In what Mayor Claffey called “one of the longest seconds in city council history,” Overton noted that she has served almost 20 years on the council and respects Flora highly.

“You have saved us in many situations that I cannot believe you got us out of some of them,” Overton said, adding that it’s a privilege to work with Flora and she wanted to say it publicly.

“You deserve everything that we can possibly offer you,” she said.

The council then approved the new contract 5-0.

Also during the meeting, which lasted just under an hour, the council agreed to pull from the consent agenda Resolution 2024-18 authorizing the city to submit an application to the California Department of Housing and Community Development for funding under the Competitive Permanent Local Housing Allocation.

If the city is successful with the application, which will seek up to $5 million, it will in turn loan the funds to the developers of Konocti Gardens, a new apartment complex project that has gone into the red due to factors including a variable interest rate on its construction zone that went up and unanticipated infrastructure improvements that are necessary.

In other business, the council presented a proclamation declaring April 2024 as Child Abuse Prevention Month, met one of the shelter’s adoptable dogs, “Turbo,” a male Belgian malinois mix, and received an update on the shelter population.

Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.
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Written by: Lake County News reports
Published: 19 April 2024

Vector Control offers reminders for a healthy, happy spring

LAKEPORT, Calif. – Spring is here and the Lake County Vector Control District has a few reminders to help you make this summer more enjoyable for you and your family.

Mosquitoes

Recent rains have filled Clear Lake as well as the containers in our yards. Mosquitoes need still water to grow. Dump out any water from your wheelbarrows, boats, gardening pots and planters, and tarps. Also remember to look for water in your children’s toys like wagons, pails, and wading pools and dump those out, too.

The district has been treating for immature mosquitoes to reduce the number of biting adults in the coming weeks. Spraying for biting mosquitoes started this week. If you are being bit by mosquitoes, you can request help by calling the Lake County Vector Control District at 707-263-4770 or online at www.LCVCD.org.

Mosquitofish will be available in May

If you have animal stock tanks, water gardens, fountains, or plan to take a break from maintaining your pool or spa, then stop by the Lake County Vector Control District’s main office to pick up mosquito-eating fish. Please call first to make sure that we have fish available.

If you picked up mosquitofish in past years, then you may still have them! Mosquitofish hibernate in the cooler months but come out again when the sun is out and the water warms up. Look for them on warmer days when the sun is warming the water where they live.

Yellowjacket wasps

Did you have yellowjackets crash your barbecue last year? Yellowjacket wasps, also known as “meat bees,” can become pests as their colonies grow large in the summer. You can prevent new yellowjacket colonies by setting out yellowjacket traps now to catch the queens. Every queen yellowjacket you catch now prevents thousands of her offspring from pestering you this summer.

If you find an underground nest of yellowjacket wasps in your yard, Vector Control can treat that for you at no charge (they cannot treat for paper wasps, honey bees or any wasps nesting in a building or structure). Call 707-263-4770 or visit www.LCVCD.org.

Rice flies. Photos courtesy of Lake County Vector Control.

What about the rice flies?

Rice flies is the local name for the chironomid midges that emerge several times a year from Clear Lake.

The good news is that rice flies are harmless and cannot bite. They spend most of their lives as bloodworms in the squishy mud at the bottom of Clear Lake until they become adult rice flies and emerge by the millions.

We usually notice them resting on buildings during the day, swarming near dusk and dawn, or flying around lights at night. Each rice fly dies two to three days after emerging — just long enough to mate and lay a batch of eggs. They don’t even eat anything.

During an emergence, more rice flies come out of the lake every day to replace the ones that died. Most rice fly emergences last seven to 10 days, but may be affected by weather and water temperatures.

Vector Control doesn’t recommend using pesticides to control rice flies because they will die in less than three days (unlike mosquitoes that live for weeks or even months).

What is Vector Control?

The Lake County Vector Control District is an independent special district that conducts surveillance and control of mosquitoes, West Nile virus, and other vectors and the diseases they transmit.

The Lake County Vector Control District’s Board of Trustees meets at 1:30 p.m. on the second Wednesday of each month at 410 Esplanade, Lakeport. All meetings are open to the public.

Residents with questions or who would like help with a mosquito problem, including reporting a neglected pool or spa, or who have an in-ground yellowjacket nest on their property that they would like treated, should contact the Lake County Vector Control District at 707-263-4770 or submit a request to www.LCVCD.org.

For more information about West Nile virus or to report a dead bird, visit https://westnile.ca.gov/. Information about mosquito repellents can be found on the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention website at www.cdc.gov/westnile/faq/repellent.
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Written by: Lake County News reports
Published: 19 April 2024

Savings Bank of Mendocino County participating in $13 million WISH program

NORTH COAST, Calif. — Savings Bank of Mendocino County has joined the Federal Home Loan Bank of San Francisco Workforce Initiative Subsidy for Homeownership, or WISH, matching down payment grant program to help more Lake County and Mendocino County residents achieve the dream of homeownership.

Through the annual grant program, Savings Bank of Mendocino County will reserve funds to assist eligible low- to moderate-income first-time homebuyers in Lake County and Mendocino County with up to the annual maximum FHFA subsidy limit, which is $30,806 in 2024 in downpayment assistance until the $13 million in WISH program funds are exhausted.

FHLBank San Francisco’s WISH grant program was created to help families overcome the most significant barriers to homeownership and build wealth.

This is the second year that Savings Bank of Mendocino County has participated in the program.

“We are proud to partner with Federal Home Loan Bank of San Francisco to assist eligible low-to-moderate income households throughout our service areas with attaining the goal of homeownership through the WISH down payment assistance program,” said Stacy Starkey, president and CEO, Savings Bank of Mendocino County.

FHLBank San Francisco’s WISH program offers eligible low- to moderate-income households 4-to-1 matching grants of up to the annual maximum FHFA subsidy limit, which is $30,806 in 2024 that can be applied to down payment and closing costs for the purchase of a first home.

The grants, available on a first-come, first-served basis, are intended for families and individuals who are ready to make the transition from renting to owning, and the grants can be paired with local, state and federal mortgage loan programs, such as Fannie Mae HomeReady and Federal Housing Administration–insured mortgages.

“Homeownership is a key pathway for families to open doors to building wealth in America, but far too many hard-working families and individuals are not able to overcome systemic barriers keeping them from owning a home of their own,” said Eric Cicourel, community investment officer with FHLBank San Francisco. “Working with our members, including Savings Bank of Mendocino County, our WISH grants help put the American dream of homeownership within reach for more hard-working families, enabling them to build wealth for future generations.”

Potential homebuyers interested in this program should contact Savings Bank of Mendocino County at 707-462-6613 or visit www.savingsbank.com to apply.
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Written by: Lake County News reports
Published: 19 April 2024
  1. State legislative committee OKs school district fiscal health bill
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  3. Habematolel Pomo of Upper Lake supports Northshore Fire Protection District with donation

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