The frigid conditions on the surface of Saturn’s largest moon, Titan, allow simple molecules in its atmosphere to break one of the most fundamental rules in chemistry, a new study shows.

According to this principle, known as “like dissolves like,” mixtures containing both polar and nonpolar components, such as oil and water, usually don’t mix and instead form separate layers.

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“This contradicts a rule in chemistry, ‘like dissolves like,’ which basically means that it should not be possible to combine these polar and nonpolar substances,” lead study author Martin Rahm, an associate professor of chemistry, biochemistry and chemical engineering at the Chalmers University of Technology, said in a statement.

The new study, published July 23 in the journal PNAS, challenges a long-held pillar of chemistry and could open the door to the discovery of more exotic solid structures across the solar system.

Athena Coustenis, a planetary scientist at the Paris-Meudon Observatory in France. She is excited to see how future data, including that from NASA’s Dragonfly probe (due to arrive on Titan in 2034), will complement the study’s findings.

“Comparing laboratory spectra with upcoming Dragonfly mission data may reveal signatures of these solids on Titan’s surface, providing insight into their geological roles and potential importance as low-temperature, prebiotic reaction environments,” Coustenis told Live Science in an email. Further work could even expand this approach to other molecules likely generated by Titan’s atmosphere, including cyanoacetylene (HC3N), acetylene (C2H2), hydrogen isocyanide (HNC), and nitrogen (N2), she said. “[This] will test whether such mixing is a general feature of Titan’s organic chemistry.”