Introduction
Solar radiation, consisting of photons with the energy of a few electron volts, is the primary source of energy for many living organisms on Earth. Nonetheless, the sun is also capable of generating an enhanced flux of more energetic radiation including X-rays, gamma radiation and energetic particles (solar energetic particles) in extreme events such as flares and coronal mass ejections (Webb and Howard, Reference Webb and Howard2012). In addition to the high energy of the sun, energetic charged particles with much higher energy (∼109–1021 eV), known as galactic cosmic rays (GCRs), are a continued source of radiation throughout our galaxy. This energetic radiation, which is easily capable of reaching the surface of terrestrial planets with rarefied atmospheres, has enough energy to ionize atoms and molecules (Griffey, Reference Griffey2021). GCRs are seen as one of the principal obstacles in achieving long-duration interplanetary crewed missions, such as missions to Mars (Chancellor, Reference Chancellor, Scott and Sutton2014). GCRs and other types of ionizing radiation are known to have a destructive influence on biology through mechanisms such as the degradation of DNA, production of harmful radicals and the damage of other biological molecules inside the cell (Wu et al., Reference Wu, Randers-Pehrson, Xu, Waldren, Geard, Yu and Hei1999). Much of the current literature is focused on humans’ exposure to ionizing radiation and hence the development of disease due to the disruption of basic biological processes. This includes various forms of cancer, heart problems, neurological disorders, birth defects and reproductive challenges (Drago-Ferrante et al., Reference Drago-Ferrante, Di Fiore, Karouia, Subbannayya, Das, Aydogan Mathyk, Arif, Guevara-Cerdán, Seylani, Galsinh, Kukulska, Borg, Suleiman, Porterfield, Camera, Christenson, Ronca, Steller, Beheshti and Calleja-Agius2022; Ray, Reference Ray and Gupta2017; Lim et al., Reference Lim, Agopian, Whitehead, Beasley, Langlois, Emery and Waller2015).
Many organisms susceptible to UV radiation have developed mechanisms such as an increase in the production of melanin in order to counteract high-radiation doses (Brenner and Hearing, Reference Brenner and Hearing2008). Superoxide dismutases, catalases, peroxidases and oxidases also serve as bacterial defense mechanisms against destructive reactive oxygen species created by radiolytic reactions (Borisov et al., Reference Borisov, Siletsky, Nastasi and Forte2021). Nevertheless, microbial life is highly resilient and can not only withstand high levels of radiation dose, but some species of microbes are known to thrive in high-radiation environments (Lin et al., Reference Lin, Hall, Lippmann-Pipke, Ward, Lollar, DeFlaun, Rothmel, Moser, Gihring, Mislowack and Onstott2005; Chivian et al., Reference Chivian, Brodie, Alm, Culley, Dehal, DeSantis, Gihring, Lapidus, Lin, Lowry, Moser, Richardson, Southam, Wanger, Pratt, Andersen, Hazen, Brockman, Arkin and Onstott2008). Microbial communities have been found to use hydrogen (H2) as a source of energy, obtained as a product of the radiolysis generated by the decay of 238U, 232Th and 40K in deep caves (Lin et al., Reference Lin, Hall, Lippmann-Pipke, Ward, Lollar, DeFlaun, Rothmel, Moser, Gihring, Mislowack and Onstott2005). Candidatus Desulforudis audaxviator, the first single-species ecosystem discovered in a South African gold mine, powers its metabolic activity using products of radiation uranium decay, such as HCO3-, SO4- and H2 (Chivian et al., Reference Chivian, Brodie, Alm, Culley, Dehal, DeSantis, Gihring, Lapidus, Lin, Lowry, Moser, Richardson, Southam, Wanger, Pratt, Andersen, Hazen, Brockman, Arkin and Onstott2008).
Since many living things on Earth protect themselves against direct exposure to UV radiation, there is a possibility that high-energy radiation sources could provide a power outlet for life instead of destroying it (Atri, Reference Atri2016, Reference Atri2020; Adam et al., Reference Adam, Fahrenbach, Jacobson, Kacar and Zubarev2021). For instance, ionizing radiation leads to a series of reactions producing radicals, while also generating compounds not usually synthesized under lower-energy conditions (Materese et al., Reference Materese, Cruikshank, Sandford, Imanaka and Nuevo2015). Radiolytic products can catalyze thermodynamically unfavorable reactions needed for the synthesis of organic molecules. It has been demonstrated that radicals can lead to the extremely efficient synthesis of macromolecules from interactions with geochemical substrates such as CO2, H2O, N2, NaCl, chlorapatite and pyrite (Adam et al., Reference Adam, Fahrenbach, Jacobson, Kacar and Zubarev2021). Ionizing radiation may have aided in the production of a number of cofactors such as iron-sulfur clusters, a foundational component of proteins involved in metabolic functions in nearly all organisms (Bonfio et al., Reference Bonfio, Valer, Scintilla, Shah, Evans, Jin, Szostak, Sasselov, Sutherland and Mansy2017). Moreover, radiolysis and subsequent radical reactions are also involved in a host of dimer, oligomer and polymer syntheses important to biomolecule formation (Ghobashy, Reference Ghobashy2018). It is important not to dismiss the possibility that high-energy radiation sources such as GCRs could provide a power outlet for life instead of destroying it under the right circumstances (Atri, Reference Atri2016; Adam et al., Reference Adam, Fahrenbach, Jacobson, Kacar and Zubarev2021).
While life powered by radiolysis may help uncover life in extreme environments on Earth, understanding such high-energy-dependent life could be especially useful for broadening our search for life on potentially habitable terrestrial planets and satellites. The scope of habitable bodies includes a Goldilocks zone of energy sufficient to power life and to ensure some sort of liquid ocean or sea. Life is more likely to originate in liquid due to the fluidity of the reactionary molecules, the ability for biolayers to organize themselves, the management of complex organic chemical reactivity and a high availability of solvents (McKay, Reference McKay2014). Marine environments can also act as a powerful buffer for organisms by aiding in the dispersal of energy. Sources of ionizing radiation include UV rays from the host star, GCRs and even water radiolysis from natural radioactivity within the ocean itself. Here on Earth, bacteria have been found to survive of water radiolysis in continental aquifers deep below the surface and sustained in sediments through the catalysis of radiolytic H2 (Sauvage et al., Reference Sauvage, Flinders, Spivack, Pockalny, Dunlea, Anderson, Smith, Murray and D’Hondt2021). If the high energy of ionizing radiation is dispersed under the correct circumstances, it may be utilized as a possible energy source while also providing extremely favorable circumstances for the synthesis of biomolecules. Evaluating the different possibilities of ionizing radiation as a source of energy in liquid environments could inevitably expand the search for alien life and help us better understand the boundaries of life itself.
In this manuscript, we explore the following:
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Concept of a Radiolytic Habitable Zone (RHZ): We introduce the novel idea of a “Radiolytic Habitable Zone,” where radiation-induced radiolysis could provide a unique source of energy for microbial metabolism. This expands the traditional understanding of habitable zones beyond those solely relying on sunlight or geothermal energy.
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Use of GCR-induced radiolysis for life support: We explore the potential for GCRs to induce radiolysis deep below the surfaces of planetary bodies. This is potentially an innovative mechanism that could allow life to survive in environments previously considered too hostile, such as the icy moons of Europa and Enceladus or the subsurface of Mars.
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GCR-induced electron production for metabolism: Our attempt at calculating the electron production rates from GCR-induced radiolysis suggests that microorganisms could utilize these electrons for metabolic processes, in particular by using solvated electrons to support life in extraterrestrial environments, extending current astrobiological models of habitability.
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Simulation-based biomass and adenosine triphosphate (ATP) production estimates: We estimate the amount of biomass and ATP that could be sustained by radiolytic electrons, offering a unique quantitative approach to evaluating extraterrestrial habitability.
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Calculation of bacterial cell densities: Factoring in the biomass of a typical bacterial cell, we estimated the density of bacterial cells as a function of depth in the shallow subsurface environment, further refining the estimate of RHZ.
We also highlight the role of radiolysis in facilitating the synthesis of complex organic molecules (COMs), such as amino acids and macromolecules, which are essential for life. This idea challenges the conventional view that high-energy radiation is purely destructive and instead proposes it as a potential catalyst for life-supporting chemistry.
Ionizing radiation-induced radiolysis as an indirect energy source for life in our solar system
Water radiolysis is defined as the disintegration of water molecules due to ionizing radiation (Le Caër, Reference Caër Le2011). When ionizing radiation interacts with a water molecule, the incident energy is enough to excite or ionize the water molecule, forming very reactive ionic or radical species in the process (Altair et al., Reference Altair, de Avellar, Rodrigues and Galante2018). Equation (1) shows the primary products of water radiolysis in its physical stage of radiolysis (Le Caër, Reference Caër Le2011).

After the initial ionization, a series of subsequent reactions take place in the physicochemical stage. The ionized water molecule (H2O+) quickly reacts with surrounding water molecules to form hydronium (H3O+) and a hydroxyl radical (HO•), while the electron (e−) becomes aqueous (e−) upon hydration. Meanwhile, the excited water molecule (H2O*) dissociates into HO• and a hydrogen radical (H•) (Le Caër, Reference Caër Le2011). The products listed above react with one another and surrounding water molecules to form various species, such as hydroxide (OH−), hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) and hydrogen gas (H2) in the chemical stage. Overall, water radiolysis can be summarized by Equation (2):

In an extraterrestrial case of water radiolysis, the ionizing radiation is sourced from either the charged particles in GCRs, the UV light emitted by the host star or the radioactive energy released by unstable nuclei. Solvated electrons are one of the primary products of water radiolysis. They are formed in a two-step process described sequentially by Equations (1) and (2). Ionizing radiation initiates the sequence by ionizing a water molecule, which subsequently releases an electron and forms an ion. This free electron can be readily captured by the surrounding liquid water molecules and is therefore termed a solvated electron. Solvated electrons, also known as hydrated electrons if the solvent is liquid water, are formed locally at the site of ionization (Wang, Reference Wang2018). It has been demonstrated that solvated electrons are well scavenged by CO2 and CO, thus creating organic compounds (Getoff et al., Reference Getoff, Scholes and Weiss1960) along with the potential of the production of organic molecules, such as carboxylic acids, aldehydes and alcohols, which can then form sugars, amino acids and peptides under favorable conditions and concentrations (Getoff, Reference Getoff2014).
Radiation chemistry generates low-energy secondary electrons, which can initiate reaction mechanisms distinct from those typically observed in photochemistry. Radiolysis has been demonstrated to facilitate the synthesis of biologically relevant molecules in several experimental studies. Additionally, it plays a role in carbon and nitrogen fixation, as evidenced by various experimental cases (Kabakchi et al., Reference Kabakchi, Arkhipov, Verkhovskaya and Lukashenko2024; Nisson et al., Reference Nisson, Kieft, Castillo, Perl and Onstott2024; Onstott et al., Reference Onstott, Lau, Magnabosco, Harris, Chen, Slater, Sherwood Lollar, Kieft, van Heerden, Borgonie and Dong2015). Reactions induced by charged particles have been shown to produce complex organic compounds, including amino acid precursors and COMs – organic structures composed of six or more atoms – within cometary ices. Abiotic ribose synthesis has been observed in interstellar ice analog experiments.
The role of electrons is of prime importance in biology as well through the harvest and transfer of energy. Energy is obtained from light by photoautotrophs and can be harvested from inorganic chemical bonds by chemolithotrophs. In both instances, the transfer and cascade of electrons allow for the retention of energy by a living organism. This energy can then be used to fix carbon to be utilized for long-term energy retention and hence a metabolism (Stelmach et al., Reference Stelmach, Neveu, Vick-Majors, Mickol, Chou, Webster, Tilley, Zacchei, Escudero, Flores Martinez, Labrado and Fernández2018). Another important role of electrons is their participation in reduction and oxidation reactions in which electron transfers between electron donors and acceptors are especially relevant to biogeochemical cycles. As these cycles evolved, so did microorganisms. This allowed oxygen to accumulate in the atmosphere, a key element to the development of complex forms of life (Falkowski and Godfrey, Reference Falkowski and Godfrey2008).
It has been proposed that a form of chemoautotroph can survive in a variety of different planetary environments in our solar system using the primary products of water radiolysis, specifically solvated electrons, as a direct source of energy (Stelmach et al., Reference Stelmach, Neveu, Vick-Majors, Mickol, Chou, Webster, Tilley, Zacchei, Escudero, Flores Martinez, Labrado and Fernández2018). Microbes such as those belonging to the Geobacter and Shewanella genus are able to engage in extracellular electron transfer (EET), a mechanism by which microbes can accept or donate electrons from surrounding minerals and metals such as iron or copper (Tanaka, Reference Tanaka, Yokoe, Igarashi, Takashino, Ishikawa, Hori, Nakanishi and Kato2018). These microbes are able to engage in EET through indirect electron transfer via microbial catalysts outside the cell or direct electron transfer via certain redox-active proteins integrated in the cellular structure (Schroder et al., Reference Schroder, Harnisch and Angenent2015). Outer membrane c-type cytochromes, in particular, are gaining recognition as the main redox-active protein involved in indirect electron transfer (Tanaka, Reference Tanaka, Yokoe, Igarashi, Takashino, Ishikawa, Hori, Nakanishi and Kato2018). Other electron shuttles via microbial catalysts include small, soluble compounds such as H2, formate, ammonia or Fe2+ (Tremblay et al., Reference Tremblay, Angenent and Zhang2017). These shuttles work as mediators between the solid electrode and the microbe; they transport electrons from the former to the latter. Certain Geobacter bacteria are evidenced to have electrically conductive filaments, termed “bacterial nanowires” or e-pili, which are composed of polymerized cytochromes that have evolved independently in different organisms to carry out direct electron transfer (Gu et al., Reference Gu, Srikanth, Salazar-Morales, Jain, O'Brien, Yi, Soni, Samatey, Yalcin and Malvankar2021; Wang et al., Reference Wang, Craig, Liu, Rensing and Egelman2023). These electrically conductive protein nanowires are located on the surfaces of bacteria and aid the cell in transferring electrons to an electron acceptor, essentially acting as reducing agents. Additionally, other microorganisms, coined “electron-eating bacteria” of the phototrophic bacterium Rhodopseudomonas palustris, are capable of harvesting electrons from solid materials, such as minerals and metals, for energy through extracellular electron uptake (Guzman et al., Reference Guzman, Rengasamy, Binkley, Jones, Ranaivoarisoa, Singh, Fike, Meacham and Bose2019). Some microorganisms, typically belonging to the Shewanella family, are able to participate in EET using a combination of both direct and indirect methods (Yang et al., Reference Yang, Kong, Chen, Lian, Liu and Xu2017). Direct electron transfer would be beneficial for microbe survival in an environment where there is enough radiolysis to produce an ideal “feeding ground” – a stream of solvated electrons.
Acquisition to life – case studies and other factors for consideration to life dependent on radiolysis on solar system bodies
As discussed in Section “Ionizing radiation-induced radiolysis as an indirect energy source for life in our solar system,” a number of microbial communities have been found to use radiolytic products to power basic metabolic functions (Blair et al., Reference Blair, D’Hondt, Spivack and Kingsley2007). One example is Desulforudis audaxviator, a chemoautotrophic extremophilic sulfate-reducing bacterium found in a 2.8 km deep gold mine in the Witwatersrand region in South Africa (Chivian et al., Reference Chivian, Brodie, Alm, Culley, Dehal, DeSantis, Gihring, Lapidus, Lin, Lowry, Moser, Richardson, Southam, Wanger, Pratt, Andersen, Hazen, Brockman, Arkin and Onstott2008). Since D. audaxviator thrives in an environment completely isolated from the photosphere and in contact with high-energy radiation from surrounding rock, its metabolic chemistry primarily relies on radicals produced by radiolysis and therefore serves as an ideal model for potential extraterrestrial ecosystems (Atri, Reference Atri2016). Sequencing of D. audaxviator’s genome revealed genes encoding pathways for sulfate reduction, carbon fixation and nitrogen fixation, all of which utilized excited metabolites or intermediates associated with water radiolysis and, in the case of some carbon fixation pathways, bicarbonate radiolysis (Chivian et al., Reference Chivian, Brodie, Alm, Culley, Dehal, DeSantis, Gihring, Lapidus, Lin, Lowry, Moser, Richardson, Southam, Wanger, Pratt, Andersen, Hazen, Brockman, Arkin and Onstott2008). The presence of D. audaxviator in underground radiolytic zones implies the ability for self-sufficient life to be powered by processes such as water radiolysis and use subsequent byproducts for electron transfer. One of the goals of this manuscript is to estimate the energy availability in subsurface environments on Mars, Europa and Enceladus, which could be sites supporting organisms utilizing these mechanisms.
In addition to D. audaxviator, there are other microorganisms that use similar means to thrive in radiolytic zones. As previously discussed, subsurface marine sediments can often serve as suitable radiolytic zones for metabolic activity and may be promising possibilities for sustaining an environment for life on icy moons such as Europa (Blair et al., Reference Blair, D’Hondt, Spivack and Kingsley2007; Altair et al., Reference Altair, de Avellar, Rodrigues and Galante2018). Analysis has been done for the potential radiolysis of CO2 ice on Europa’s surface in which Europa’s oceans could hence be oxidized with O2 concentrations plausibly similar to those in Earth’s oceans (Hand et al., Reference Hand, Carlson and Chyba2007). Prior studies have also highlighted how molecular hydrogen is one of the most likely contenders for electron donors in radiolytic zones (Gales et al., Reference Galès, Libert, Sellier, Cournac, Chapon and Heulin2004; Lin et al., Reference Lin, Hall, Lippmann-Pipke, Ward, Lollar, DeFlaun, Rothmel, Moser, Gihring, Mislowack and Onstott2005; Blair et al., Reference Blair, D’Hondt, Spivack and Kingsley2007; D’Hondt et al., Reference D’Hondt, Spivack, Pockalny, Ferdelman, Fischer, Kallmeyer, Abrams, Smith, Graham, Hasiuk, Schrum and Stancin2009; Gregory et al., Reference Gregory, Barnett, Field and Milodowski2019). Recent studies have studied sediments from the subseafloor near the Juan de Fuca ridge and isolated numerous sulfate-reducing bacteria of genera Desulfosporosinus, Desulfotomaculum, Desulfovibrio and Desulfotignum; these bacteria demonstrated chemolithotrophic growth in the presence of H2 as the sole electron donor and small amounts of organic compounds, with a strain of Desulfovibrio indonesiensis even demonstrating chemolithoautotrophic activity in the absence of organic compounds (Fichtel et al., Reference Fichtel, Mathes, Könneke, Cypionka and Engelen2012). Given that H2 can be produced through water radiolysis and because subseafloor sediments with limited organic compounds can accommodate various sulfur-reducing chemolithotrophs as well as chemoautotrophs, it is quite possible that sulfate-reducing species like Dv. indonesiensis, in addition to D. audaxviator, could thrive in isolated deep subseafloor radiolytic zones on other celestial bodies in the solar system (Fichtel et al., Reference Fichtel, Mathes, Könneke, Cypionka and Engelen2012; Altair et al., Reference Altair, de Avellar, Rodrigues and Galante2018).
Moreover, chemoautotrophic bacteria fix carbon from inorganic sources for their metabolism. It is especially important to consider the pathways of carbon fixation when determining the likelihood of microbial ecosystems on deep-sea sediments in the solar system due to the impact it may have on influencing carbon cycling and other larger-scale processes in the ecosystem (Molari et al., Reference Molari, Manini and Dell’Anno2013). While D. audaxviator does appear to contain channels to allow for heterotrophic breakdown of sugars and amino acids from dead cells, its genome, in particular, encodes two carbon monoxide dehydrogenase systems which can be used for the reductive acetyl-coenzyme A (CoA) pathway (Wood-Ljungdahl pathway), which allows the condensation of carbon monoxide molecules to produce acetyl-CoA (Chivian et al., Reference Chivian, Brodie, Alm, Culley, Dehal, DeSantis, Gihring, Lapidus, Lin, Lowry, Moser, Richardson, Southam, Wanger, Pratt, Andersen, Hazen, Brockman, Arkin and Onstott2008). Notably, methanogens utilize a form of the Wood-Ljungdahl pathway for their own metabolism, which may be of interest due to competition between sulfate-reducing bacteria and methanogens’ development on surface sediments (Hügler and Sievert, Reference Hügler and Sievert2011; Maltby et al., Reference Maltby, Sommer, Dale and Treude2016). Similar to that pathway, other chemoautotrophs may incorporate additional processes that facilitate carbon fixation from inorganic sources, such as the reductive tricarboxylic acid (rTCA) cycle and dicarboxylate/4-hydroxybutyrate (DC/4-HB) cycle (Hügler & Sievert, Reference Hügler and Sievert2011). However, in contrast to these, most chemoautotrophs and photoautotrophs use the Calvin-Benson cycle, which involves using ATP, nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH) and enzymes like ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (RuBiSCO) to fix carbon dioxide (Tamoi et al., Reference Tamoi, Nagaoka, Yabuta and Shigeoka2005). Overall, inorganic molecules on other bodies in the solar System could be used for carbon fixation by microbial communities, with the Wood-Ljungdahl pathway (also used by D. audaxviator and other sulfate-reducing bacteria) and the Calvin cycle being likely contenders for inorganic fixation processes in primitive life (Fuchs, Reference Fuchs2011; Ward and Shih, Reference Ward and Shih2019). Similar to anoxic environments on Earth today and in the past, it is possible that inorganic carbon fixation on other solar system bodies takes place with H2 as a primary electron donor (Tice and Lowe, Reference Tice and Lowe2006). Hence, radiolytic zones in deep-sea sediments could facilitate inorganic carbon fixation through water radiolysis (Blair et al., Reference Blair, D’Hondt, Spivack and Kingsley2007; Chivian et al., Reference Chivian, Brodie, Alm, Culley, Dehal, DeSantis, Gihring, Lapidus, Lin, Lowry, Moser, Richardson, Southam, Wanger, Pratt, Andersen, Hazen, Brockman, Arkin and Onstott2008).
In terms of radiolysis and determining what primitive microbial life may look like elsewhere in the Solar System, charge carriers can be significant objects of study, especially with regard to iron-sulfur clusters (Wang et al., Reference Wang, Yang, Qu, Liu and Su2011). As discussed in the introduction, ionizing radiation-induced radiolysis may have aided in the production of iron-sulfur clusters, which are now found in proteins involved in nearly every known organism’s metabolism (Bonfio et al., Reference Bonfio, Valer, Scintilla, Shah, Evans, Jin, Szostak, Sasselov, Sutherland and Mansy2017). Iron-sulfur clusters have a unique importance in extant biochemistry underscored by their versatility of functionality; these clusters can be responsible for aiding in electron transfer through redox reactions, influencing tertiary and quaternary protein structure and facilitating catalysis (Beinert, Reference Beinert1997). Moreover, iron-sulfur clusters have been shown to be able to reduce nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+) to NADH in anaerobic prebiotic conditions, which indicates the possibility of radiolytic geochemical syntheses having an influence on abiogenesis (Weber et al., Reference Weber, Henderson, LaRowe, Goldman, Perl, Billings and Barge2022). There are various theories regarding the origin of iron-sulfur clusters on Earth, but particularly relevant to our analysis is the evidence that UV light can induce oxidation of ferrous ions and the cleavage of bonds like the disulfide bridges in cystine to promote formation of polynuclear iron-sulfur clusters such as [2Fe-2S] and [4Fe-4S] even in deep submerged environments (Bonfio et al., Reference Bonfio, Valer, Scintilla, Shah, Evans, Jin, Szostak, Sasselov, Sutherland and Mansy2017). The shallow subsurface of Mars, Europa and Enceladus needs to be explored to estimate the chemical environment, which will help us better understand the role of these pathways in supporting life in such environments. Iron-sulfur clusters likely played a significant role in prebiotic chemistry that contributed to early life on Earth. Wächtershäuser (Reference Wächtershäuser1988, Reference Wächtershäuser and Brack1998) proposed that reactions between iron(II) sulfide and hydrogen sulfide, producing pyrite, facilitated key redox reactions that predated and potentially enabled the rTCA and Wood-Ljungdahl carbon fixation pathways. These reactions are thermodynamically spontaneous and could drive nonspontaneous organic conversions, such as the transformation of carboxylic acids to keto acids and pyruvate from lactate.
Cytochromes, essential for electron transfer, are complex molecules mostly synthesized by living cells. Their absence in space raises questions about their potential presence on other planetary bodies. Porphyrins, which are key components of cytochromes, can form abiotically from amino acids that condense into oligopyrroles in acidic environments and can be metalated without biological metabolism. Amino acids have been detected on Mars (Sharma et al., Reference Sharma, Roppel, Murphy, Beegle, Bhartia, Steele, Hollis, Siljeström, McCubbin, Asher, Abbey, Allwood, Berger, Bleefeld, Burton, Bykov, Cardarelli, Conrad, Corpolongo, Czaja, DeFlores, Edgett, Farley, Fornaro, Fox, Fries, Harker, Hickman-Lewis, Huggett, Imbeah, Jakubek, Kah, Lee, Liu, Magee, Minitti, Moore, Pascuzzo, Sanchez-Vahamonde, Scheller, Shkolyar, Stack, Steadman, Tuite, Uckert, Werynski, Wiens, Williams, Winchell, Kennedy and Yanchilina2023), found in meteorites and are distributed in various types of carbonaceous chondrites (Elsila et al., Reference Elsila, Aponte, Blackmond, Burton, Dworkin and Glavin2016). This suggests that primitive cytochromes or related molecules could exist on rocky bodies, potentially supporting microbial life.
Nonetheless, it is important to add that cytochromes from cells could gather direct secondary electrons product of radiolysis. This argument is suggested based on the data, which discovered that oxidized sulfur species bacteria were taking electrons directly from electrodes thanks to their outer membrane cytochromes (Deng et al., Reference Deng, Dohmae, Nealson, Hashimoto and Okamoto2018). To be more specific, the strain Desulfovibrio ferrophilus IS5 was cultured in a medium with only acetate as the carbon source and an indium tin-dope oxide (ITO) electrode as the electron/energy donor and, despite the poorly enriched medium, the bacteria achieved to uptake the electrons and use them to its metabolism to grow. We propose that extraterrestrial environments with enough water and organic salts like acetate with some electron flux could sustain life.
Areas of focus for extraterrestrial life powered by ionizing radiation-induced radiolysis: Mars, Europa and Enceladus
In order for life to develop through ionizing radiation-induced radiolysis, there ought to be favorable abiotic and biotic conditions. As far as the most recent research is concerned, there are three main areas of focus in the solar system where life can be sustained: Mars, Europa and Enceladus.
Mars, Europa and Enceladus
(a) Mars
There is now a general consensus to support that Mars was warmer and wetter with favorable conditions for life during the early to middle Noachian period (4.1–3.7 billion years ago) (Nisbet and Sleep, Reference Nisbet and Sleep2001). Basic building blocks for life (carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, phosphorus and sulfur) were discovered by the Curiosity rover in an ancient lake alongside possible breakdown products of carboxylic acids, though it still remains unclear the direct origin of these biotic indicators (Grotzinger et al., Reference Grotzinger, Sumner, Kah, Stack, Gupta, Edgar, Rubin, Lewis, Schieber, Mangold, Milliken, Conrad, DesMarais, Farmer, Siebach, Calef, Hurowitz, McLennan, Ming, Vaniman, Crisp, Vasavada, Edgett, Malin, Blake, Gellert, Mahaffy, Wiens, Maurice, Grant, Wilson, Anderson, Beegle, Arvidson, Hallet, Sletten, Rice, Bell, Griffes, Ehlmann, Anderson, Bristow, Dietrich, Dromart, Eigenbrode, Fraeman, Hardgrove, Herkenhoff, Jandura, Kocurek, Lee, Leshin, Leveille, Limonadi, Maki, McCloskey, Meyer, Minitti, Newsom, Oehler, Okon, Palucis, Parker, Rowland, Schmidt, Squyres, Steele, Stolper, Summons, Treiman, Williams and Yingst2014; Freissinet et al., Reference Freissinet, Glavin, Buch, Cyril, Teinturier, Archer, Williams, Williams, Millan, Steele, Navarro-Gonzalez, House, Malespin and Mahaffy2019). Acetates are also commonly found on the Mars surface and are even considered a product of organic matter that went through radiolysis (Lewis et al., Reference Lewis, Eigenbrode, Wong, McAdam, Archer, Sutter, Millan, Williams, Guzman, Das, Rampe, Achilles, Franz, Andrejkovičová, Knudson and Mahaffy2021). Today, Mars has become a more desolate environment for life with a thinner atmosphere, dryer conditions and subfreezing temperatures. Due to the loss of a magnetic field in combination with a thin atmosphere, Mars is consistently exposed to high-radiation sources such as a relatively low, constant influx of GCRs and the more variable solar energetic particles, mostly consisting of protons accelerated by solar flares. However, life is still plausible with building evidence of the possibility of water sources available underneath the polar caps (Orosei et al., Reference Orosei, Lauro, Pettinelli, Cicchetti, Coradini, Cosciotti, Di Paolo, Flamini, Mattei, Pajola, Soldovieri, Cartacci, Cassenti, Frigeri, Giuppi, Martufi, Masdea, Mitri, Nenna, Noschese, Restano and Seu2018) and below the Martian subsurface (Nazari-Sharabian et al., Reference Nazari-Sharabian, Aghababaei, Karakouzian and Karami2020). In order to remain in liquid form under such cold conditions, pockets of water would be extremely salinated in addition to a high possibility of the presence of perchlorates, a potential obstacle for life (Wadsworth and Cockell, Reference Wadsworth and Cockell2017). Nevertheless, with the right defenses, the carbon dioxide ice surrounding these pockets would allow for an oxidative species to allow for a similar process (Atri Reference Atri2016; Atri Reference Atri2020). It has been shown that solvated electrons have the ability to reduce liquid carbon dioxide (Rybkin, Reference Rybkin2020), a promising step toward important cycles such as the carbon fixation cycle under radiolytic conditions. Although the Martian subsurface provides adverse conditions for life as we know it, halophiles have demonstrated the ability to thrive under such salty conditions, a thriving ecology has been found in Antarctica’s subglacial lakes and microorganisms have been shown to build perchlorate-resistant genes where exposure is high (Fendrihan et al., Reference Fendrihan, Legat, Pfaffenhuemer, Gruber, Weidler, Gerbl and Stan-Lotter2006; Rogers et al., Reference Rogers, Shtarkman, Koçer, Edgar, Veerapaneni and D’Elia2013; Díaz-Rullo et al., Reference Díaz-Rullo, Rodríguez-Valdecantos, Torres-Rojas, Cid, Vargas, González and González-Pastor2021).
(b) Europa and Enceladus
Europa and Enceladus are the focus of much extraterrestrial water radiolysis research due to their proposed subsurface oceans. The tidal flexing produced by the giant planets would be able to produce a constant force of energy and heat that would have lasted for millions, even billions, of years (Thomas et al., Reference Thomas, Tajeddine, Tiscareno, Burns, Joseph, Loredo, Helfenstein and Porco2016; Longo and Damer, Reference Longo and Damer2020).
Although Europa is perceived as a static entity with little refresh of oxidative products due to the expansive ocean and no wet-dry cycles, Europa’s early history showed occasional ice shell overturns that could have given rise to an acidic ocean (Russell et al., Reference Russell, Murray and Hand2017). Oxidation and reduction gradients would have flourished and hence the possibility of metabolic life. Recently, it has also been identified that the CO2 present on Europa’s surface comes from within its interior, most likely from the ocean beneath the surface, increasing the plausibility of organic material like acetate (Trumbo and Brown, Reference Trumbo and Brown2023). Enceladus’ ocean rests beneath an ice shell with plumes erupting from hydrothermal vents containing the necessary ingredients for life forms to originate and thrive in (Thomas et al., Reference Thomas, Tajeddine, Tiscareno, Burns, Joseph, Loredo, Helfenstein and Porco2016; Hsu et al., Reference Hsu, Postberg, Sekine, Shibuya, Kempf, Horányi, Juhász, Altobelli, Suzuki, Masaki, Kuwatani, Tachibana, Sirono, Moragas-Klostermeyer and Srama2015). Enceladus also containing acetates within its ocean is also plausible based on the conclusion that Enceladus potentially has carbonaceous chondrites, whose major component is acetate (Wagner et al., Reference Wagner, Andersen, Hahn and Johnson2022).
Continued habitability of life forms could be sustained from the energy created through radioactive decay of 238U, 232Th and 40K (Altair et al., Reference Altair, de Avellar, Rodrigues and Galante2018). Oxidized byproducts of water radiolysis, mainly sulfur and iron, could then provide energy for sulfur-reducing bacteria to exist in the ocean water (Altair et al., Reference Altair, de Avellar, Rodrigues and Galante2018). While the oxidized byproducts of water radiolysis can likely provide enough energy for sulfur-reducing bacteria to survive in extraterrestrial climates, the primary products of water radiolysis, mainly solvated electrons, also have the potential to sustain extraterrestrial life. Water radiolysis on Europa and Enceladus is commonly proposed to happen in any of three ways: from GCR-induced ionizing radiation, the influx of charged electrons accelerated by Jupiter and Saturn’s nearby magnetic field or the decay of radioactive isotopes evidenced to exist on the subsurface ocean floor (Hand et al., Reference Hand, Carlson and Chyba2007; Kollman et al., Reference Kollmann, Roussos, Kotova, Cooper, Mitchell, Krupp and Paranicas2015; Altair et al., Reference Altair, de Avellar, Rodrigues and Galante2018; Teodoro et al., Reference Teodoro, Elphic, Davila, McKay and Dartnell2016).
Estimating energy availability from charged particles
When a flux of high-energy particles in the form of GCR strikes an icy surface, there is a release of electrons from the atoms of that solid as a result of the transfer of energy, creating solvated or “secondary” electrons. These electrons can travel freely within the ice layer at a much lower energy than their cousins of high-energy particles in GCR. As we have described earlier, a current of these electrons can be captured by microorganisms living beneath the layer in order to sustain biological growth in a process called direct electrophy (Stelmach et al., Reference Stelmach, Neveu, Vick-Majors, Mickol, Chou, Webster, Tilley, Zacchei, Escudero, Flores Martinez, Labrado and Fernández2018). By analyzing the physics of the generated current densities (current per area) giving particle fluxes and the composition of the ice layer, approximations can be made about the minimum amount of biomass that can be sustained, an approximation of the amounts of ATP that can be produced and whether that can be plausible for life to exist. Here we analyze the environments of Europa, Mars and Enceladus.
The GEANT4 simulation toolkit (Agostinelli et al., Reference Agostinelli, Allison, Amako, Apostolakis, Araujo, Arce, Asai, Axen, Banerjee, Barrand, Behner, Bellagamba, Boudreau, Broglia, Brunengo, Burkhardt, Chauvie, Chuma, Chytracek, Cooperman, Cosmo, Degtyarenko, Dell’Acqua, Depaola, Dietrich, Enami, Feliciello, Ferguson, Fesefeldt, Folger, Foppiano, Forti, Garelli, Giani, Giannitrapani, Gibin, Gómez Cadenas, González, Gracia Abril, Greeniaus, Greiner, Grichine, Grossheim, Guatelli, Gumplinger, Hamatsu, Hashimoto, Hasui, Heikkinen, Howard, Ivanchenko, Johnson, Jones, Kallenbach, Kanaya, Kawabata, Kawabata, Kawaguti, Kelner, Kent, Kimura, Kodama, Kokoulin, Kossov, Kurashige, Lamanna, Lampén, Lara, Lefebure, Lei, Liendl, Lockman, Longo, Magni, Maire, Medernach, Minamimoto, Mora de Freitas, Morita, Murakami, Nagamatu, Nartallo, Nieminen, Nishimura, Ohtsubo, Okamura, O'Neale, Oohata, Paech, Perl, Pfeiffer, Pia, Ranjard, Rybin, Sadilov, Di Salvo, Santin, Sasaki, Savvas, Sawada, Scherer, Sei, Sirotenko, Smith, Starkov, Stoecker, Sulkimo, Takahata, Tanaka, Tcherniaev, Safai Tehrani, Tropeano, Truscott, Uno, Urban, Urban, Verderi, Walkden, Wander, Weber, Wellisch, Wenaus, Williams, Wright, Yamada, Yoshida and Zschiesche2003; Allison et al., Reference Allison, Amako, Apostolakis, Araujo, Arce Dubois, Asai, Barrand, Capra, Chauvie, Chytracek, Cirrone, Cooperman, Cosmo, Cuttone, Daquino, Donszelmann, Dressel, Folger, Foppiano, Generowicz, Grichine, Guatelli, Gumplinger, Heikkinen, Hrivnacova, Howard, Incerti, Ivanchenko, Johnson, Jones, Koi, Kokoulin, Kossov, Kurashige, Lara, Larsson, Lei, Link, Longo, Maire, Mantero, Mascialino, McLaren, Mendez Lorenzo, Minamimoto, Murakami, Nieminen, Pandola, Parlati, Peralta, Perl, Pfeiffer, Pia, Ribon, Rodrigues, Russo, Sadilov, Santin, Sasaki, Smith, Starkov, Tanaka, Tcherniaev, Tome, Trindade, Truscott, Urban, Verderi, Walkden, Wellisch, Williams, Wright and Yoshida2006) was utilized to model energy deposition rates in subsurface environments. GEANT4 is a widely accepted and extensively validated tool, particularly in fields such as medical physics, high-energy physics and planetary science. Its versatility allows for the simulation of interactions across a broad range of particles and energies, making it a gold standard for particle transport modeling. The toolkit simulates complex processes including electromagnetic interactions, nuclear reactions and hadronic interactions. It has been rigorously validated with experimental data across numerous applications, making it a reliable choice for investigating energy deposition in diverse planetary subsurface environments (Agostinelli et al., Reference Agostinelli, Allison, Amako, Apostolakis, Araujo, Arce, Asai, Axen, Banerjee, Barrand, Behner, Bellagamba, Boudreau, Broglia, Brunengo, Burkhardt, Chauvie, Chuma, Chytracek, Cooperman, Cosmo, Degtyarenko, Dell’Acqua, Depaola, Dietrich, Enami, Feliciello, Ferguson, Fesefeldt, Folger, Foppiano, Forti, Garelli, Giani, Giannitrapani, Gibin, Gómez Cadenas, González, Gracia Abril, Greeniaus, Greiner, Grichine, Grossheim, Guatelli, Gumplinger, Hamatsu, Hashimoto, Hasui, Heikkinen, Howard, Ivanchenko, Johnson, Jones, Kallenbach, Kanaya, Kawabata, Kawabata, Kawaguti, Kelner, Kent, Kimura, Kodama, Kokoulin, Kossov, Kurashige, Lamanna, Lampén, Lara, Lefebure, Lei, Liendl, Lockman, Longo, Magni, Maire, Medernach, Minamimoto, Mora de Freitas, Morita, Murakami, Nagamatu, Nartallo, Nieminen, Nishimura, Ohtsubo, Okamura, O'Neale, Oohata, Paech, Perl, Pfeiffer, Pia, Ranjard, Rybin, Sadilov, Di Salvo, Santin, Sasaki, Savvas, Sawada, Scherer, Sei, Sirotenko, Smith, Starkov, Stoecker, Sulkimo, Takahata, Tanaka, Tcherniaev, Safai Tehrani, Tropeano, Truscott, Uno, Urban, Urban, Verderi, Walkden, Wander, Weber, Wellisch, Wenaus, Williams, Wright, Yamada, Yoshida and Zschiesche2003; Allison et al., Reference Allison, Amako, Apostolakis, Araujo, Arce Dubois, Asai, Barrand, Capra, Chauvie, Chytracek, Cirrone, Cooperman, Cosmo, Cuttone, Daquino, Donszelmann, Dressel, Folger, Foppiano, Generowicz, Grichine, Guatelli, Gumplinger, Heikkinen, Hrivnacova, Howard, Incerti, Ivanchenko, Johnson, Jones, Koi, Kokoulin, Kossov, Kurashige, Lara, Larsson, Lei, Link, Longo, Maire, Mantero, Mascialino, McLaren, Mendez Lorenzo, Minamimoto, Murakami, Nieminen, Pandola, Parlati, Peralta, Perl, Pfeiffer, Pia, Ribon, Rodrigues, Russo, Sadilov, Santin, Sasaki, Smith, Starkov, Tanaka, Tcherniaev, Tome, Trindade, Truscott, Urban, Verderi, Walkden, Wellisch, Williams, Wright and Yoshida2006). As particles traverse the subsurface, they gradually lose energy through interactions such as ionization and excitation of the surrounding material (OLIVEIRA, 2016). The code directly provides both the energy deposition rate and the electron production rate in a given area, mass or volume, which can be converted to current density (charge per unit area per time). The results are shown in Tables 1–3.
Table 1. Energy deposition rate as a function of depth below the surface of Mars obtained from GEANT4, along with estimates of current density, biomass and ATP production rate based on Equations (3)–(5)

Table 2. Energy deposition rate as a function of depth below the surface of Europa, along with estimates of current density, biomass and ATP production rate based on Equations (3)–(5)

Table 3. Energy deposition rate as a function of depth below the surface of Enceladus, along with estimates of current density, biomass and ATP production rate based on Equations (3)–(5)

The GCR spectrum was derived from the widely used Badhwar-O’Neill model (Slaba and Whitman, Reference Slaba and Whitman2020). To ensure accurate atmospheric conditions, we sourced data from the Mars Climate Database (MCD), a comprehensive dataset widely utilized within the Mars scientific community. Our numerical approach was validated against measurements obtained by the Radiation Assessment Detector (RAD), with our calculated background dose rate of 0.59 mSv/day aligning closely with RAD’s reported value of 0.64 ± 12 mSv/day, well within instrumental uncertainties. GCR-induced radiation dose rate as calculated by GEANT4 as a function of depth and the GCR flux rate was compared with the earlier numerical modeling work for Mars (Atri, Reference Atri2020), Europa (Nordheim et al., Reference Nordheim, Jasinski and Hand2019) and Enceladus (Teodoro et al., Reference Teodoro, Davila, McKay, Dartnell and Elphic2017) and was found within 4%, which could be due to the use of the latest version of the GEANT4 package, with updated cross sections and calibration and numerical error typically associated with comparing different Monte Carlo simulations.
To support the biochemical reactions within microorganisms, a sufficient amount of current (electrons) is needed for reduction processes such as the proton pump in photosynthesis. Given the current density calculated using the process above, another equation can be used to determine an approximate minimum amount of biomass that the current can sustain (Seager et al., Reference Seager, Bains and Hu2013; Stelmach et al., Reference Stelmach, Neveu, Vick-Majors, Mickol, Chou, Webster, Tilley, Zacchei, Escudero, Flores Martinez, Labrado and Fernández2018):

where
${\Sigma _B}$
is the minimum biomass
$\left( {{\rm{g}}/{\rm{c}}{{\rm{m}}^2}} \right)$
, J is the current density already defined, V is the electrochemical potential of a reaction that is an attribute of the chemical reaction utilized (carbon fixation was used for this paper taken as -1.35 volts) and
${P_{me}}$
is defined as the minimal energy rate needed to sustain active biomass.
${P_{me}}$
is calculated using the Arrhenius equation:

where A is a constant,
${E_a}$
is the activation energy at a value of
$6.94 \times {10^4}{\rm{\;J\;mo}}{{\rm{l}}^{ - 1}}$
and R is the gas constant at
$8.314\;\;{\rm{J\;mo}}{{\rm{l}}^{ - 1}}{{\rm{K}}^{ - 1}}$
. This equation describes how the rate of a chemical reaction depends on temperature. The rate increases exponentially with temperature if the activation energy is constant. The pre-exponential factor (A) is a measure of the frequency of collisions and their orientation, while
${E_a}$
is the minimum energy required for the reaction to proceed. The values derived assume an anaerobic environment, which fixes A to a value of
$2.2 \times {10^7}\;{\rm{kJ\;}}{{\rm{g}}^{ - 1}}{\rm{\;}}{{\rm{s}}^{ - 1}}$
(Seager et al., Reference Seager, Bains and Hu2013). The processes described above utilize the method of direct electrophy in which secondary electrons are directly absorbed by microorganisms. The biomass production formula relates the electrical energy available from radiolysis to the minimum biomass density that can be supported. The Arrhenius equation calculates the energy needed to sustain metabolic activity based on temperature and activation energy. These equations together allow for estimating how much biomass can be produced in different environments based on the energy available from radiolysis and the energy requirements for sustaining microbial life.
ATP is used by all living organisms as the main molecule for the transportation of the chemical energy required for many of the metabolic reactions that are required for sustaining cells. Estimates have been made for Escherichia coli in which during the lag phase,
$0.4 - 4 \times {10^6}$
of ATP molecules are being consumed per cell per second, while during the exponential the rate of consumption
$6.4 \times {10^6}\;{\rm{ATP\;cel}}{{\rm{l}}^{ - 1}}{\rm{\;}}{{\rm{s}}^{ - 1}}$
are consumed (Deng et al., Reference Deng, Beahm, Ionov and Sarpeshkar2021). In this paper, we estimate how much ATP could be produced taking into consideration the energy proportioned by secondary electrons if they enter the electron transport chain. Estimations for how many ATP molecules that can be produced can be determined by utilizing the flux and energy of the secondary electrons that hypothetical microorganisms can use under the surface. The average energy to attach the last phosphate to ADP to produce ATP is 0.304 eV (Atri, Reference Atri2016), which can be used to calculate the ATP production rate from the following equation:

Since Mars and the icy moons of Europa and Enceladus are widely considered to be prime targets for finding potentially habitable environments, we focus on them and estimate the ionization rates and energy availability for possible metabolic activity. In all cases, we calculate the energy deposition rate as a function of depth. GCRs are composed of charged particles of very high energies, which are able to produce secondary particles capable of penetrating several meters deep below the surface.
Mars
The data in Table 1 shows the estimated values for the environment of Mars at various depths in the rock surface. The average density of Martian rock is taken to be a consistent
$2.65\;{\rm{g\;c}}{{\rm{m}}^{ - 3}}$
(Atri, Reference Atri2020).
Europa
The data Table 2 shows the energy deposition rate as a function of depth for Europa. The average density of the ice surface is taken to be
$1.00\;{\rm{g\;c}}{{\rm{m}}^{ - 3}}$
assuming pure water (Nordheim et al., Reference Nordheim, Jasinski and Hand2019).
Enceladus
The data Table 3 shows the simulation results of the energy deposition versus depth for Enceladus. The average density of the ice surface is taken to be
$1.00\;{\rm{g\;c}}{{\rm{m}}^{ - 3}}$
assuming pure water (Teodoro et al., Reference Teodoro, Davila, McKay, Dartnell and Elphic2017).
Conclusion and discussion
As the search for life progresses, so do the boundaries for which life is able to originate from, survive in and even thrive with. Planets and moons within our solar system often have thin atmospheres and/or no magnetic field, resulting in a continual bombardment of ionizing radiation to their surface. Although this high-energy radiation often breaks apart organic compounds, there lies nuance in this destructive force. High-energy radiation may have aided in the formation of prebiotic molecules, and it has been demonstrated that many organisms utilize radiolytic products here on Earth. Based on the plausible positive implications of ionizing radiation for favorable conditions of prebiotic life and on the existence of microorganisms living near it, we support a scenario in which an organism can uptake electrons directly or indirectly from radiolysis in subsurface environments. While ionizing radiation that can create electrons may be sourced from X-rays, gamma radiation and unstable nuclei, GCRs ought to be heavily considered as an important source of radiation due to their consistency and stability – important factors in a stabilized metabolism and evolution of organisms (Atri and Melott, Reference Atri and Melott2014). GCRs interact with atmospheres and surfaces to generate a cascade of secondary and tertiary particles such as electrons and muons, among others. Our hypothesized organism would be able to uptake solvated electrons directly through appendages such as bacterial nanowires. Said organisms would also be able to withstand and possibly convert the high energy of radiation through mechanisms described before or through novel mechanisms unknown to Earth. We have calculated the energy deposition rate from GCRs on Mars, Europa and Enceladus while discussing possible mechanisms through which life could power itself in such conditions as a continuation of previous work (Atri, Reference Atri2016; Stelmach et al., Reference Stelmach, Neveu, Vick-Majors, Mickol, Chou, Webster, Tilley, Zacchei, Escudero, Flores Martinez, Labrado and Fernández2018). By assessing the GCR flux on three different planetary environments, we can now have more poignant discussions regarding this theory and its implications for the search for life in environments such as the ones proposed.
We now focus on the amount of biomass and ATP production rate in the three cases. According to our calculations, the highest amount of biomass and ATP production is in Enceladus, followed by Mars and Europa. As shown in Tables 1–3 and Figure 1, the upper limit of the maximum biomass production is in Enceladus at 4 × 10−8 g cm−2, followed by Mars at 1.1 × 10−8 g cm−2 and Europa at 4.5 × 10−9 g cm−2. As shown in Tables 1–3 and Figure 2, the ATP production rate is highest in Enceladus with the upper limit of 108 molecules g−1s−1, followed by Mars at 3.85 × 107 molecules g−1s−1 and Europa at 1.26 × 107 molecules g−1s−1. In terms of depth below the surface, the shallowest depth of peak biomass production is 0.6 m below the surface of Mars, followed by Europa at 1 m and Enceladus at 2 m (Figure 1). The total energy deposition rate depends on the flux of incident particles, and the peak energy deposition depth depends on the energy spectrum of incident particles (Atri et al., Reference Atri, Melott and Thomas2010) on the surface of a planet or moon. The harder spectrum consists of more energetic particles, which are capable of penetrating deeper, as opposed to a softer spectrum where particles deposit their energy at a shallower depth. This energy spectrum varies considerably throughout the solar system, which is also reflected in our calculations.

Figure 1. Biomass versus depth of Mars (blue), Europa (black) and Enceladus (red).

Figure 2. ATP production rate versus depth for Mars (black), Europa (red) and Enceladus (blue).
This leads us to formulate the concept of an RHZ, a zone within a planet where GCRs can penetrate, inducing electrolytic chemistry and possibly supporting biological activity. We assume that the biomass of a typical bacterial cell is 10 picograms or 10−12 g. From the above calculations, we can estimate the number of bacterial cells that can be supported via the radiolysis mechanism. In other words, we can translate the biomass density to the number density of bacterial cells. These calculations provide a quantitative framework for defining the RHZ, highlighting the regions within each celestial body where microbial metabolism could be sustained by radiolysis. The RHZ boundaries are influenced by factors such as GCR flux, subsurface composition and temperature, which vary across Mars, Europa and Enceladus. Our calculations of bacterial cell density show the maximum value of 104 cells/cm3 at a depth of 0.6 m in the case of Mars, 4 × 103 cells/cm3 at a depth of 1 m for Europa and 4.3 × 104 cells/cm3 at a depth of 2 m in the case of Enceladus.
Model calculations at the site of D. audaxviator estimate the energy availability to be in the range of 105–106 eV g−1 s−1 (Lin et al., Reference Lin, Hall, Lippmann-Pipke, Ward, Lollar, DeFlaun, Rothmel, Moser, Gihring, Mislowack and Onstott2005). Our calculations of Mars and Europa estimate 106–107 eV g−1 s−1, which is an order of magnitude higher than this, and ∼107 eV g−1 s−1 for Enceladus. The energy availability is more than sufficient for a D. audaxviator-type organism. Coming to electron uptake, the experimental results described earlier (Deng et al., Reference Deng, Dohmae, Nealson, Hashimoto and Okamoto2018) show a current density of 0.2 μA cm−2. The maximum current density on Mars and Europa is ∼10−12 μA cm−2, which is 5 orders of magnitude lower than the experimental results, and on Enceladus is ∼10−11 μA cm−2, or 4 orders of magnitude lower. More experiments need to be conducted to understand if such low values of current density can support metabolic activity via the electron uptake mechanism.
Moreover, there are other mechanisms that may be possible for an organism to utilize high energy to power its metabolic functions. One said proposition is the excitement of molecules in order to fluoresce, termed indirect electrophy (Altair et al., Reference Altair, de Avellar, Rodrigues and Galante2018; Stelmach et al., Reference Stelmach, Neveu, Vick-Majors, Mickol, Chou, Webster, Tilley, Zacchei, Escudero, Flores Martinez, Labrado and Fernández2018). As the electrons relax to their stable ground states, the energy is converted into light, which can be absorbed by microorganisms as part of a photosynthetic reaction. No calculations were performed for this method in this paper but could be readily studied by extending the direct electrophy method to include photon emission.
Another mechanism that could arise from the excitement of molecules and subsequent release of energy is through the utilization of Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) (Jones and Bradshaw, Reference Jones and Bradshaw2019). FRET would allow for the direct transfer of energy from an excited molecule to the receiver. If in close enough proximity (100 angstroms), it would be possible for the excited molecule to directly contribute to the electron transport chain (Beljonne et al., Reference Beljonne, Curutchet, Scholes and Silbey2009).
It is necessary to highlight that certain factors are not included, such as the effect of different temperatures on calculations. We also did not consider if the environmental conditions of the specifically selected rocky bodies are appropriate for the emergence of COMs, such as cytochromes essential to EET. Additionally, it must be noted that it may be difficult for life to thrive in an electron-solvated environment due to its high conductivity. Finally, the flux of GCRs on Earth, due to its thick atmosphere and a strong global magnetic field, is not large enough to be a significant factor in life on Earth; therefore, we don’t have an example of life that evolved under such conditions, and hence, all work proposed is theoretical.
Nevertheless, while a number of planets considered as prime targets for astrobiology have been explored with flyby missions, orbiters or with rovers such as on the surface of Mars, the shallow subsurface environment is yet to be explored. The shallow subsurface environment is not directly subjected to extreme temperature variations and other harsh conditions and may provide insight into the history of the planet’s climate. For remote sensing data, current studies ought to orient research toward exploring temperature gradients beneath the ice layer as well as identifying thinner regions in the ice layer. For all future land rovers, a suite of instruments capable of measuring radiation levels, exploring the subsurface chemistry and detecting biosignatures may be needed to assess the possibility of the proposed organisms. We argue for future planetary science missions to have instruments capable of exploring the shallow subsurface environments of prime astrobiology targets as discussed below.
On Mars, exploration for life below the ice would occur either in the Planum Boreum (north pole) or Planum Australe (south pole). Both caps are mainly made up of water ice with a layer of seasonal dry ice. The northern ice cap rises 1000 km above the surface, and the slightly smaller southern cap rises around 3 km above the surface (Sharp, Reference Sharp1974). No rover has yet been sent to the caps of Mars. Nevertheless, a mission to the caps would allow for exploration of life below the ice sheet and also give way for other missions to take place that would explore the carbon cycle of Mars, its atmospheric history and its implications on Earth’s own climate models (Thomas et al., Reference Thomas, Becerra and Smith2022). If future human habitation is a possibility on Mars’ surface, the polar ice caps may prove to be a source of water for inhabitants, hence making the need for controlled exploration of the caps ever more pressing to prevent unintentional contamination from Earth. In-situ sampling will provide us with a better understanding of the chemical composition at the depths proposed and the potential to host extinct or extant biological activity. ESA’s ExoMars 2028 is equipped with a 2-m drill capable of retrieving and analyzing subsurface samples. NASA’s proposed Mars Life Explorer (MLE) in the mid-2030s will also have similar capabilities to study subsurface samples.
On Europa, if life were to emerge from hydrothermal vents, a series of flyby missions would suffice to detect life based on a collection of either organic molecules or a high concentration of the metabolic byproducts of organisms (Affholder et al., Reference Affholder, François, Boris, Régis and Stéphane2022). With future missions such as Europa Clipper in 2024, features including Radar for Europa Assessment and Sounding: Ocean to Near-surface (REASON), a measure to evaluate depth of the ice layer, and Europa Thermal Emission Imaging System (E-THEMIS), a measure of surface temperature, will allow for future insight on thinner and warmer areas in the ice layer, which may provide locations where water is closer to the surface. Using this tentative information, we can direct future landing missions that can search for life in places where the ice crust is thin rather than just focus on exploration near hydrothermal vents.
Enceladus, with a greater ease of landing compared to Europa due to the lower gravitational field, has the third highest priority Flagship mission from the 2023–2032 Planetary Science Decadal Survey. The Enceladus Orbilander will be a multi-year mission launching in 2030 to detect life in Enceladus with a focus on the release of particles from the hydrothermal plumes along with a two-year exploration on the surface, also collecting plume debris. We propose that there ought to also be an exploration of samples near breaches in the ice layer. Estimates have demonstrated that in the southern pole region, due to geological, tidal and orbital characteristics, the ice layer can be as thin as a few kilometers (Čadek et al., Reference Čadek, Tobie, Van Hoolst, Massé, Choblet, Lefèvre, Mitri, Baland, Běhounková, Bourgeois and Trinh2016; Marusiak et al., Reference Marusiak, Tharimena, Panning, Vance, Boehm, Stähler and Van Driel2023). Hence, we would emphasize future exploration of Enceladus to focus near the fissures in the southern pole, where it is more likely to extract samples below the surface. Other proposed missions including the Enceladus Life Finder (ELF) and Breakthrough Enceladus will also focus on the plumes of Enceladus. Laboratory experimental work supporting this idea will allow us to better constrain these models and help us identify RHZs within our solar system and possibly beyond.
Iron-sulfur clusters are hypothesized to have been critical in early Earth’s prebiotic chemistry, driving key redox reactions like the rTCA and Wood-Ljungdahl pathways (Wächtershäuser, Reference Wächtershäuser1988, Reference Wächtershäuser and Brack1998) through thermodynamically favorable processes. These reactions could have facilitated the conversion of organic molecules, laying the groundwork for life. The absence of cytochromes in space raises questions about their potential existence on other planetary bodies, though porphyrins, components of cytochromes, can form abiotically from amino acids found on Mars and in meteorites (Sharma et al., Reference Sharma, Roppel, Murphy, Beegle, Bhartia, Steele, Hollis, Siljeström, McCubbin, Asher, Abbey, Allwood, Berger, Bleefeld, Burton, Bykov, Cardarelli, Conrad, Corpolongo, Czaja, DeFlores, Edgett, Farley, Fornaro, Fox, Fries, Harker, Hickman-Lewis, Huggett, Imbeah, Jakubek, Kah, Lee, Liu, Magee, Minitti, Moore, Pascuzzo, Sanchez-Vahamonde, Scheller, Shkolyar, Stack, Steadman, Tuite, Uckert, Werynski, Wiens, Williams, Winchell, Kennedy and Yanchilina2023; Elsila et al., Reference Elsila, Aponte, Blackmond, Burton, Dworkin and Glavin2016). The paper’s calculations, using GEANT4 simulations, suggest that energy from radiolysis on Mars, Europa and Enceladus could support microbial life, possibly utilizing primitive electron transfer mechanisms akin to cytochromes. This supports the hypothesis that extraterrestrial environments could sustain life via radiolytic processes, even in the absence of fully developed biological structures like cytochromes.
Overall, we have shown that radiolysis induced by GCRs could provide a viable energy source for microbial metabolism in the subsurface environments of Mars, Europa and Enceladus. This opens up new possibilities for the existence of life in extreme, high-radiation environments beyond Earth. We find that energy deposition rates from GCR-induced radiolysis are sufficient to support life similar to organisms found in extreme environments on Earth, such as Desulforudis audaxviator in deep subsurface radiolytic zones. The calculated energy and electron production rates suggest that metabolic activity could be sustained at certain depths below the surface of these planetary bodies. Mars, Europa and Enceladus are highlighted as prime candidates for hosting life powered by radiolysis. Among these, Enceladus is found to have the highest potential for biomass and ATP production, followed by Mars and Europa. The presence of subsurface oceans or pockets of water, combined with radiolysis, creates favorable conditions for potential life forms. We emphasize that radiolysis may not only be destructive but could also play a crucial role in creating biologically useful chemicals and facilitating electron transfer processes needed for metabolic activity. This provides a broader perspective on how life could emerge and sustain itself in environments traditionally considered inhospitable. The manuscript calls for future planetary missions to focus on the shallow subsurface environments of Mars, Europa and Enceladus. These missions should be equipped to detect biosignatures, measure radiation levels and explore subsurface chemistry, particularly in areas where radiolysis might be occurring and supporting microbial life.
Acknowledgments
The authors would like to thank Blue Marble Space Institute of Science (BMSIS) for facilitating this research and bringing together collaborators through its Young Scientist Program (YSP). We thank Megan Simeone and Alyssa Guzman for discussions in the early stages of this project. We thank the reviewers for their constructive feedback, which helped improve the manuscript.
Funding statement
This work was supported by the New York University Abu Dhabi (NYUAD) Institute Research Grants G1502 and CG014 and the ASPIRE Award for Research Excellence (AARE) Grant S1560 by the Advanced Technology Research Council (ATRC).
Competing interests
The authors have no conflicts of interest to declare.