
Researchers at the space agency believe they have  discovered vital clues  that    appeared to indicate that primitive  aliens could be living on the  planet.       Data from Nasa's Cassini  probe has analysed the complex chemistry on the     surface of Titan,  which experts say is the only moon around the planet  to    have a dense  atmosphere.
They have discovered that life forms have been  breathing in the planet’s     atmosphere and also feeding on its  surface’s fuel.    Astronomers claim 

the moon is generally too cold to support even  liquid  water    on its surface.    The research has     been detailed  in two separate studies.    The first paper, in the journal Icarus,  shows that hydrogen gas flowing    throughout the planet’s atmosphere  disappeared at the surface. This    suggested that alien forms could in  fact breathe.    The second paper, in the Journal of Geophysical  Research, concluded that  there    was lack of the chemical on the  surface.    Scientists were then led to believe it had been possibly  consumed by  life.    Researchers had expected sunlight interacting with  chemicals in the  atmosphere    to produce acetylene gas. But the  Cassini probe did not detect any  such gas.    Chris McKay, an  astrobiologist at Nasa Ames Research Centre, at Moffett  Field,    

California who led the research, said: “We  suggested hydrogen  consumption    because it's the obvious gas for life  to consume on Titan, similar to  the    way we consume oxygen on Earth.     "If these signs do turn out to be a sign of life, it would be doubly     exciting because it would represent a second form of life  independent  from    water-based life on Earth.”   Professor John  Zarnecki, of the Open University, added: “We believe the    chemistry is  there for life to form. It just needs heat and warmth to    kick-start  the process.    “In four billion years’ time, when the Sun swells into a  red giant, it  could    be paradise on Titan.”   They warned, however,  that there could be other explanations for the  findings.    But taken  together, they two indicate two important conditions necessary  for     methane-based life to exist.
 
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Scientists have also discovered primitive bacterial life in rings surrounding Uranus!
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