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Two years ago here at TED
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I reported that we had discovered
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at Saturn, with the Cassini Spacecraft,
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an anomalously warm and geologically active region
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at the southern tip of the small Saturnine moon
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Enceladus, seen here.
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This region seen here for the first time
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in the Cassini image taken in 2005. This is the south polar region,
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with the famous tiger-stripe fractures crossing the south pole.
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And seen just recently in late 2008,
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here is that region again,
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now half in darkness because the southern hemisphere
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is experiencing the onset of August
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and eventually winter.
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And I also reported that we'd made this mind-blowing discovery --
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this once-in-a-lifetime discovery
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of towering jets
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erupting from those fractures at the south pole,
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consisting of tiny water ice crystals
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accompanied by water vapor
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and simple organic compounds like carbon dioxide and methane.
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And at that time two years ago
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I mentioned that we were speculating
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that these jets might in fact be geysers,
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and erupting from pockets
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or chambers of liquid water underneath the surface,
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but we weren't really sure.
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However, the implications of those results --
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of a possible environment within this moon
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that could support prebiotic chemistry,
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and perhaps life itself --
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were so exciting that, in the intervening two years,
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we have focused more on Enceladus.
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We've flown the Cassini Spacecraft
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by this moon now several times,
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flying closer and deeper into these jets,
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into the denser regions of these jets,
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so that now we have come away with some
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very precise compositional measurements.
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And we have found
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that the organic compounds coming from this moon
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are in fact more complex than we previously reported.
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While they're not amino acids,
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we're now finding things like
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propane and benzene,
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hydrogen cyanide, and formaldehyde.
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And the tiny water crystals here
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now look for all the world
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like they are frozen droplets of salty water,
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which is a discovery that suggests
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that not only do the jets come from
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pockets of liquid water,
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but that that liquid water is in contact with rock.
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And that is a circumstance
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that could supply the chemical energy
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and the chemical compounds needed to sustain life.
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So we are very encouraged by these results.
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And we are much more confident now than we were two years ago
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that we might indeed
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have on this moon, under the south pole,
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an environment or a zone that is hospitable to living organisms.
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Whether or not there are living organisms there, of course,
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is an entirely different matter.
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And that will have to await the arrival,
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back at Enceladus,
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of the spacecrafts, hopefully some time in the near future,
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specifically equipped to address that particular question.
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But in the meantime I invite you to imagine the day
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when we might journey to the Saturnine system,
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and visit the Enceladus interplanetary geyser park,
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just because we can.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)