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Team led by Pakistani scientist discovers signs of life on Saturn moon

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Team led by Pakistani scientist discovers signs of life on Saturn moon
By Suhail Yusuf
Published: October 2, 2019
TWEET EMAIL
2070352-untitled-1569996565.jpg

PHOTO: EXPRESS

KARACHI: Pakistani astrobiologist Dr Nozair Khawaja and his team have discovered a key organic molecule on Enceladus – one of the 62 moons orbiting the planet Saturn.

Enceladus is about 500 kilometres in diameter.

Experts have termed the discovery to be the first of its kind beyond Earth, making Enceladus eligible to be in the list of the most notable candidates for having extra-terrestrial life.

Documentary on Pakistani scientist Abdus Salam makes it to Netflix

Dr Khawaja, a researcher at the Freie Universität Berlin, is leading a team of scientists from the United States (US) and Germany.

Khawaja’s team was conducting research on data gathered from the moon’s hydrothermal core – earlier gathered by National Aeronautics and Space Administration’s (NASA) Cassini spacecraft.

Speaking to The Express Tribune, Dr Khawaja said: “I have found small but soluble and reactive organic compound pluming from the depths [ocean] of Enceladus. The compound from the ocean of Enceladus is already a known ingredient of amino acids found in the oceans of Earth.”

untitled-2-1569996311.jpg

PHOTO: EXPRESS

Although NASA’s Cassini spacecraft – launched in 1997 – completed its research mission in 2017, scientists have yet to study all the research material gathered during the spacecraft’s vital mission.

“With each passing day, Enceladus is becoming one of the most habitable potential objects in the solar system to study traces of life after Earth. The next logical step should be to explore the Cassini space probe data and find more bio-signatures in the subsurface ocean of Enceladus. More space missions should be proposed and planned to explore this tiny world which is full of surprises,” said the Pakistani astrobiologist.

Life beyond Blue Planet

Amino acids are the organic compounds known as the building blocks of life for almost every creature on Earth. Various types of amino acids play major roles in protein making, metabolism, synthesis in hormones and neurotransmitters from the brain to across the human body.

The organic molecule, found by Dr Khawaja and his team, is composed of oxygen and nitrogen and has been enveloped in ice grain. It can easily be dubbed as a precursor of amino acid.

Enceladus’s ocean is covered with an ice sheet, similar to Earth’s icy poles. The ice grains and the vapours that are ejected from this ocean through hydrothermal activity are released in space from small cracks on the moon’s surface.

Pakistani scientist months away from first ever brain-chip trials on humans

On Earth, such events have been witnessed at vents or hot chimneys on the ocean floor. The hydrothermal vents on Earth eject many vital molecules and compounds vital for life. Enceladus may also hold the same mechanism as it spews essential molecules, a phenomenon recorded by the NASA and confirmed by scientists.

In 2018, Dr Khawaja had also observed a relatively large compound from Enceladus.

Who is Dr Khawaja?

Dr Khawaja was born in Wazirabad – a city located in Gujranwala district of Punjab. He completed his Masters in Astronomy and Space Sciences from Punjab University. Later, the Pakistani scientist acquired a PhD in Geosciences from Heidelberg University in Germany. He has also worked as a post-doctorate scholar at the Institute of Earth Sciences at the same German university.

untitled-2-1569996504.jpg

Pakistani astrobiologist Dr Nozair Khawaja. PHOTO: EXPRESS

He has done a comprehensive study on life beyond Earth and is a leading name in many research programmes.

In 2019, NASA had honoured Dr Khawaja with the ‘Group Achievement Award’ for Cassini’s Cosmic Dust Analyzer (CDA). He is also a recipient of the Horneck-Brack Award from the European Astrobiology Network Association in 2018.

His work has appeared in highly cited peer-reviewed scientific journals such as Nature, research journals and the Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society and Science.

Dr Khawaja’s latest research around the key organic molecule on Enceladus has also found a place in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society (MNRAS).


Read more: Latest , Pakistan , Pakistani scientist
 
. .
Team led by Pakistani scientist discovers signs of life on Saturn moon
By Suhail Yusuf
Published: October 2, 2019
TWEET EMAIL
2070352-untitled-1569996565.jpg

PHOTO: EXPRESS

KARACHI: Pakistani astrobiologist Dr Nozair Khawaja and his team have discovered a key organic molecule on Enceladus – one of the 62 moons orbiting the planet Saturn.

Enceladus is about 500 kilometres in diameter.

Experts have termed the discovery to be the first of its kind beyond Earth, making Enceladus eligible to be in the list of the most notable candidates for having extra-terrestrial life.

Documentary on Pakistani scientist Abdus Salam makes it to Netflix

Dr Khawaja, a researcher at the Freie Universität Berlin, is leading a team of scientists from the United States (US) and Germany.

Khawaja’s team was conducting research on data gathered from the moon’s hydrothermal core – earlier gathered by National Aeronautics and Space Administration’s (NASA) Cassini spacecraft.

Speaking to The Express Tribune, Dr Khawaja said: “I have found small but soluble and reactive organic compound pluming from the depths [ocean] of Enceladus. The compound from the ocean of Enceladus is already a known ingredient of amino acids found in the oceans of Earth.”

untitled-2-1569996311.jpg

PHOTO: EXPRESS

Although NASA’s Cassini spacecraft – launched in 1997 – completed its research mission in 2017, scientists have yet to study all the research material gathered during the spacecraft’s vital mission.

“With each passing day, Enceladus is becoming one of the most habitable potential objects in the solar system to study traces of life after Earth. The next logical step should be to explore the Cassini space probe data and find more bio-signatures in the subsurface ocean of Enceladus. More space missions should be proposed and planned to explore this tiny world which is full of surprises,” said the Pakistani astrobiologist.

Life beyond Blue Planet

Amino acids are the organic compounds known as the building blocks of life for almost every creature on Earth. Various types of amino acids play major roles in protein making, metabolism, synthesis in hormones and neurotransmitters from the brain to across the human body.

The organic molecule, found by Dr Khawaja and his team, is composed of oxygen and nitrogen and has been enveloped in ice grain. It can easily be dubbed as a precursor of amino acid.

Enceladus’s ocean is covered with an ice sheet, similar to Earth’s icy poles. The ice grains and the vapours that are ejected from this ocean through hydrothermal activity are released in space from small cracks on the moon’s surface.

Pakistani scientist months away from first ever brain-chip trials on humans

On Earth, such events have been witnessed at vents or hot chimneys on the ocean floor. The hydrothermal vents on Earth eject many vital molecules and compounds vital for life. Enceladus may also hold the same mechanism as it spews essential molecules, a phenomenon recorded by the NASA and confirmed by scientists.

In 2018, Dr Khawaja had also observed a relatively large compound from Enceladus.

Who is Dr Khawaja?

Dr Khawaja was born in Wazirabad – a city located in Gujranwala district of Punjab. He completed his Masters in Astronomy and Space Sciences from Punjab University. Later, the Pakistani scientist acquired a PhD in Geosciences from Heidelberg University in Germany. He has also worked as a post-doctorate scholar at the Institute of Earth Sciences at the same German university.

untitled-2-1569996504.jpg

Pakistani astrobiologist Dr Nozair Khawaja. PHOTO: EXPRESS

He has done a comprehensive study on life beyond Earth and is a leading name in many research programmes.

In 2019, NASA had honoured Dr Khawaja with the ‘Group Achievement Award’ for Cassini’s Cosmic Dust Analyzer (CDA). He is also a recipient of the Horneck-Brack Award from the European Astrobiology Network Association in 2018.

His work has appeared in highly cited peer-reviewed scientific journals such as Nature, research journals and the Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society and Science.

Dr Khawaja’s latest research around the key organic molecule on Enceladus has also found a place in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society (MNRAS).


Read more: Latest , Pakistan , Pakistani scientist

Could be bigger, I hope Pakistan honors him and won't disgrace him like Abdus Salam was.
 
. . .
Could be bigger, I hope Pakistan honors him and won't disgrace him like Abdus Salam was.
Stop lying without any source. Pakistan did not disgrace Abdus Salam... do you have any source to back up your shitty claims?

Abdus Salam was treated poorly because he was Ahmadi not because he was a scientist
No, he was not treated poorly. Even today there's a chair at the department of physics at GCU. Some people have a habit of lying and spewing venom against Pakistan.
 
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Stop lying without any source. Pakistan did not disgrace Abdus Salam... do you have any source to back up your shitty claims?


No, he was not treated poorly. Even today there's a chair at the department of physics at GCU. Some people have a habit of lying and spewing venom against Pakistan.

Yes, he was treated so well that he left the country in protest.
 
.
Stop lying without any source. Pakistan did not disgrace Abdus Salam... do you have any source to back up your shitty claims?

If Pakistanis had treated him fairly.. Then ICTP should have been in Pakistan instead of italy..

No, he was not treated poorly. Even today there's a chair at the department of physics at GCU. Some people have a habit of lying and spewing venom against Pakistan.[/QUOTE]

Pakistan has never treated well anyone who has contributed in science and development.. Most of our leading scientists were treated badly.. i, e Dr abdual salaam, Dr munir, Dr AQ khan and Pervaiz hodby
 
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If Pakistanis had treated him fairly.. Then ICTP should have been in Pakistan instead of italy..

No, he was not treated poorly. Even today there's a chair at the department of physics at GCU. Some people have a habit of lying and spewing venom against Pakistan.

Pakistan has never treated well anyone who has contributed in science and development.. Most of our leading scientists were treated badly.. i, e Dr abdual salaam, Dr munir, Dr AQ khan and Pervaiz hodby[/QUOTE]

Lolz @ pervez hoodboy, is he even a scientist? Whats his contribution to science? How has he been treated badly??? The onky contribution i see frm him is BS against religion and being a libtard.

Yes, he was treated so well that he left the country in protest.
He wanted to influence country laws and politics, thats not for a scientist to do. A scientist should have no indulgence in politics or religious affairs. He left in a protest not because of recognition or science issues but because he wanted the law about ahmadis to change. Countries dont change laws on order of scientists.

I hope u ppl have enough brain cells to understand.

Team led by Pakistani scientist discovers signs of life on Saturn moon
By Suhail Yusuf
Published: October 2, 2019
TWEET EMAIL
2070352-untitled-1569996565.jpg

PHOTO: EXPRESS

KARACHI: Pakistani astrobiologist Dr Nozair Khawaja and his team have discovered a key organic molecule on Enceladus – one of the 62 moons orbiting the planet Saturn.

Enceladus is about 500 kilometres in diameter.

Experts have termed the discovery to be the first of its kind beyond Earth, making Enceladus eligible to be in the list of the most notable candidates for having extra-terrestrial life.

Documentary on Pakistani scientist Abdus Salam makes it to Netflix

Dr Khawaja, a researcher at the Freie Universität Berlin, is leading a team of scientists from the United States (US) and Germany.

Khawaja’s team was conducting research on data gathered from the moon’s hydrothermal core – earlier gathered by National Aeronautics and Space Administration’s (NASA) Cassini spacecraft.

Speaking to The Express Tribune, Dr Khawaja said: “I have found small but soluble and reactive organic compound pluming from the depths [ocean] of Enceladus. The compound from the ocean of Enceladus is already a known ingredient of amino acids found in the oceans of Earth.”

untitled-2-1569996311.jpg

PHOTO: EXPRESS

Although NASA’s Cassini spacecraft – launched in 1997 – completed its research mission in 2017, scientists have yet to study all the research material gathered during the spacecraft’s vital mission.

“With each passing day, Enceladus is becoming one of the most habitable potential objects in the solar system to study traces of life after Earth. The next logical step should be to explore the Cassini space probe data and find more bio-signatures in the subsurface ocean of Enceladus. More space missions should be proposed and planned to explore this tiny world which is full of surprises,” said the Pakistani astrobiologist.

Life beyond Blue Planet

Amino acids are the organic compounds known as the building blocks of life for almost every creature on Earth. Various types of amino acids play major roles in protein making, metabolism, synthesis in hormones and neurotransmitters from the brain to across the human body.

The organic molecule, found by Dr Khawaja and his team, is composed of oxygen and nitrogen and has been enveloped in ice grain. It can easily be dubbed as a precursor of amino acid.

Enceladus’s ocean is covered with an ice sheet, similar to Earth’s icy poles. The ice grains and the vapours that are ejected from this ocean through hydrothermal activity are released in space from small cracks on the moon’s surface.

Pakistani scientist months away from first ever brain-chip trials on humans

On Earth, such events have been witnessed at vents or hot chimneys on the ocean floor. The hydrothermal vents on Earth eject many vital molecules and compounds vital for life. Enceladus may also hold the same mechanism as it spews essential molecules, a phenomenon recorded by the NASA and confirmed by scientists.

In 2018, Dr Khawaja had also observed a relatively large compound from Enceladus.

Who is Dr Khawaja?

Dr Khawaja was born in Wazirabad – a city located in Gujranwala district of Punjab. He completed his Masters in Astronomy and Space Sciences from Punjab University. Later, the Pakistani scientist acquired a PhD in Geosciences from Heidelberg University in Germany. He has also worked as a post-doctorate scholar at the Institute of Earth Sciences at the same German university.

untitled-2-1569996504.jpg

Pakistani astrobiologist Dr Nozair Khawaja. PHOTO: EXPRESS

He has done a comprehensive study on life beyond Earth and is a leading name in many research programmes.

In 2019, NASA had honoured Dr Khawaja with the ‘Group Achievement Award’ for Cassini’s Cosmic Dust Analyzer (CDA). He is also a recipient of the Horneck-Brack Award from the European Astrobiology Network Association in 2018.

His work has appeared in highly cited peer-reviewed scientific journals such as Nature, research journals and the Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society and Science.

Dr Khawaja’s latest research around the key organic molecule on Enceladus has also found a place in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society (MNRAS).


Read more: Latest , Pakistan , Pakistani scientist

I have always had this belief that icy moons of jupiter and saturn like europa and enceladus would definitely have multi cellular life on it. These moons are fully ice and have oceans beneath them. Its just a matter of time before we visit and confirm it.
We should not be wasting time and money on sending humans to mars or the moon again, we should directly send human explorers to these icy moons.
 
.
No, he was not treated poorly. Even today there's a chair at the department of physics at GCU. Some people have a habit of lying and spewing venom against Pakistan.

This is from the BBC:

In 1980, soon after Pakistani professor Abdus Salam was awarded the Nobel Prize for his contribution to developing the theory of electroweak unification in particle physics, he was invited to a ceremony at the Quaid-e-Azam University (QAU) in Islamabad.

Few at the time expected the decision would backfire.

But it did, and the reason was because of sectarian hatred unleashed by a 1974 law that declared the Ahmadi community - to which Dr Salam belonged - as non-Muslim.

"The ceremony was organised to honour Dr Salam, and was to be held at QAU's Department of Physics, which was founded by one of his former students, Dr Riazuddin," says Pervez Hoodbhoy, a well-known Pakistani physicist, academic and security analyst who was among the organisers.

Dr Salam arrived in Islamabad to attend the ceremony, but couldn't enter the QAU premises due to fierce agitation started by student members of the powerful political and religious wing of the Jamaat-e-Islami party.

"The situation grew extremely tense; I clearly remember, they were threatening that they would break Dr Salam's legs if he dared enter the university campus; we had to call off the programme," Mr Hoodbhoy recalls.



This is the man that made Pakistan a key partner of NASA at the time and make us one of the first nations to launch a rocket into the upper atmosphere/outer space; he also laid down the foundations of Pakistans nuclear program and kept working with the PAEC even after 1974 when he was declared a non-Muslim. He was a loyal to Pakistan yet the religious establishment and mullah class couldnt stomach his status and did everything in their power to make him unwelcome in his own country.
 
.
Pakistan has never treated well anyone who has contributed in science and development.. Most of our leading scientists were treated badly.. i, e Dr abdual salaam, Dr munir, Dr AQ khan and Pervaiz hodby

Lolz @ pervez hoodboy, is he even a scientist? Whats his contribution to science? How has he been treated badly??? The onky contribution i see frm him is BS against religion and being a libtard.[/QUOTE]

Well people who understand physics knows his caliber.. My Nuclear Physics instructor met him and listening to his lectures.. He told me that no one in Pakistan understand physics better than him.
 
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Abdus Salam was treated poorly because he was Ahmadi not because he was a scientist
the stupidest reply ever shows the idiotic and gobar type mind set of Pakistani muslims......no matter Dr Abdus Salam is ahmedi or christian i respect him cz he was Pakistani and worked for Pakistan and humanity in general. I respect Dr. Abdus Salam more then any shit Mullah.
 
. . .
Pakistan has never treated well anyone who has contributed in science and development.. Most of our leading scientists were treated badly.. i, e Dr abdual salaam, Dr munir, Dr AQ khan and Pervaiz hodby

Lolz @ pervez hoodboy, is he even a scientist? Whats his contribution to science? How has he been treated badly??? The onky contribution i see frm him is BS against religion and being a libtard.


He wanted to influence country laws and politics, thats not for a scientist to do. A scientist should have no indulgence in politics or religious affairs. He left in a protest not because of recognition or science issues but because he wanted the law about ahmadis to change. Countries dont change laws on order of scientists.

I hope u ppl have enough brain cells to understand.



I have always had this belief that icy moons of jupiter and saturn like europa and enceladus would definitely have multi cellular life on it. These moons are fully ice and have oceans beneath them. Its just a matter of time before we visit and confirm it.
We should not be wasting time and money on sending humans to mars or the moon again, we should directly send human explorers to these icy moons.[/QUOTE]
For Pervez Hodhbhoy, I must say, a Scientist should remain a scientist,one should not spew venom against Islam and should not interfere in Religious Matters.
 
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