Author Topic: Discovery Of Underground Water Means Saturn's Moon Could Hold Life  (Read 755 times)

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Discovery Of Underground Water Means Saturn's Moon Could Hold Life
Business Insider
By Jennifer Welsh  3 hours ago



Enceladus, a small moon orbiting the planet Saturn, is likely filled with liquid water under an icy crust. Giant oceans of salty water mean the moon could contain alien microbial life.

We know Mars was once flowing with water and there's currently frozen water in the shadowed craters on Mercury. Two other moons in the outer solar system, Titan and Europa, also seem to contain liquid water.

Enceladus — which is  about 300 miles across and maintains a temperature of minus 292 degrees Fahrenheit on its surface — is unusually active.

Scientists have suspected that Enceladus has liquid water since 2005, when NASA's Cassini spacecraft observed huge plumes of it escaping the moon's icy crust, like in the image below.



NASA/JPL-Caltech and Space Science Institute

Enceladus's water vapor jets, emitted from the southern polar region.

Until now, though, we haven't had clear evidence of this liquid water. The discovery was published in the April 4 issue of the journal Science.

New gravity measurements were obtained by monitoring the tiny motions of NASA's spacecraft Cassini, which has spent the last 10 years photographing and measuring Saturn and its moons.

The measurements indicated that there was a significant difference in the local gravity fields that would have been created by an ice-only pole and the one detected by Cassini's instruments. The gravity from the southern pole tugged at the spacecraft harder than would have been expected if it was just made of ice.

Specifically, a dimple in the ice crust at the south pole didn't decrease the local gravity as much as it should have. There had to be something denser between the ice crust and the solid silicate rock core to make up for this discrepancy: an ocean of water.

The measurement doesn't specifically indicate this is a water ocean, but it's the most likely explanation. Especially since we know the crust of the moon is water ice, and we know there are water plumes emanating from the southern pole.



NASA/JPL-Caltech

Cartoon illustrating the possible interior of Enceladus based on Cassini gravity investigation, which suggests an ice outer shell and a low density, rocky core with a regional water ocean sandwiched in between at high southern latitudes. Cassini ISS images were used to depict the surface geology and the plumes.

The newly-discovered ocean is up to 6 miles deep and lies under up to 24 miles of ice.

"This water ocean...may extend halfway or more towards the equator in every direction," study researcher David Stevenson, of Caltech, said in a statement."This means that it is as large — or larger — than Lake Superior."

The water is kept liquid because of heat created by the giant planet Saturn's pull on the tiny moon. The water likely creates the tiger stripes on the outside of the moon's ice crust near the south pole, first detected in 2005.

"This then provides one possible story to explain why water is gushing out of these fractures we see at the south pole," said  Stevenson.

The researchers say this environment may be ripe for complex chemical reactions which might create conditions like those on the early Earth.

"Material from Enceladus’ south polar jets contains salty water and organic molecules, the basic chemical ingredients for life," according to Cassini project scientist Linda Spilker of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory. "Their discovery expanded our view of the 'habitable zone' within our solar system and in planetary systems of other stars. This new validation that an ocean of water underlies the jets furthers understanding about this intriguing environment."



NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute

Image of Saturn's moon Enceladus, showing the "tiger stripes," long fractures from which the water vapor jets are emitted.


http://news.yahoo.com/discovery-underground-water-means-saturns-180752264.html

...

It's a huge alien engineering project, right there in plain sight, to rocket-propel Enceladus somewhere else...

I'm not serious, but there's a good SF story in the idea...

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Hidden Ocean Found on Saturn's Icy Moon Enceladus, Could Potentially Support Life
SPACE.com
by Mike Wall, Senior Writer  4 hours ago



The Saturn moon Enceladus harbors a big ocean of liquid water beneath its icy crust that may be capable of supporting life as we know it, a new study reports.

The water ocean on Enceladus is about 6 miles (10 kilometers) deep and lies beneath a shell of ice 19 to 25 miles (30 to 40 km) thick, researchers said. Further, it's in direct contact with a rocky seafloor, theoretically making possible all kinds of complex chemical reactions — such as, perhaps, the kind that led to the rise of life on Earth.

"The main implication is that there are potentially habitable environments in the solar system in places which are completely unexpected," study lead author Luciano Iess said in a video about the discovery produced by his home institution, Sapienza University in Rome. "Enceladus has a surface temperature of about minus 180 degrees Celsius [minus 292 degrees Fahrenheit], but under that surface there is liquid water."

The new finding, which is published online today (April 3) in the journal Science, doesn't exactly come out of left field. Rather, it confirms suspicions many researchers have had about Enceladus since 2005, when NASA's Cassini spacecraft first spotted ice and water vapor spewing from fractures near the moon's south pole.


Measuring Enceladus' gravity

Iess and his colleagues mapped out Enceladus' gravity by measuring how the 313-mile-wide (504 km) moon tugged on Cassini during three close flybys from 2010 to 2012.



Image of Saturn's moon Enceladus, showing the "tiger stripes," long fractures from which the water vapor jets are emitted


"As the spacecraft flies by Enceladus, its velocity is perturbed by an amount that depends on variations in the gravity field that we're trying to measure," co-author Sami Asmar, of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., said in a statement. "We see the change in velocity as a change in radio frequency, received at our ground stations here all the way across the solar system."

This ultra-precise tracking system — NASA's Deep Space Network can tell if Cassini speeds up or slows down by just 1 foot (0.3 meters) per hour — revealed the presence of a "negative mass anomaly" at Enceladus' south pole. In other words, the area harbors less mass than would be expected for a perfectly spherical body.

That makes sense, because a large depression marks the south pole's surface, researchers said. But the observed mass anomaly is significantly smaller than expected based on the size of the dent (about 0.6 miles, or 1 km deep).

The researchers thus concluded that "extra" mass underground must be reducing the effect. A subsurface ocean of liquid water, which is denser than ice, is the only reasonable candidate, they said.



Cartoon illustrating the possible interior of Enceladus based on Cassini gravity investigation, which suggests an ice outer shell and a low density, rocky core with a regional water ocean sandwiched in between at high southern latitudes


The heat required to keep this water in a liquid state is generated within Enceladus, with much of that energy perhaps coming from tidal interactions between Enceladus and another of Saturn's moons, Dione. The moon's internal energy stores are prodigious; a 2011 study found that Enceladus' south polar region pumps out 15.8 gigawatts of heat-generated power, equivalent to the output of 20 coal-fired power plants.


A lot of water

The team's calculations suggest that the moon's ocean covers at least as much area as Lake Superior, the second-largest lake on Earth — though the icy moon's sea is much deeper than Lake Superior and thus holds a great deal more water.

The ocean is likely confined to the moon's southern hemisphere, reaching halfway to the equator or so from the pole. But the study team cannot rule out the possibility that it extends globally, said co-author Dave Stevenson of the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena.

The subsurface sea probably feeds Enceladus' geysers, which blast organic compounds — the carbon-containing building blocks of life as we know it — into space along with ice and water vapor. [Enceladus' Surprising Geysers (Video)]



Enceladus's water vapor jets, emitted from the southern polar region.


Further, the new study marks the first time scientists have used gravity measurements to discover an ocean on another world, Stevenson said. For example, researchers inferred the existence of a subsurface sea on Jupiter's moon Europa from magnetic-field data, which indicated the presence of an underground conductive layer (almost certainly salty water).


Water on rock

The gravity measurements also suggest that Enceladus is composed of layers of different materials, with a low-density core consisting of silicate rock underlying the ocean, researchers said.

This is good news for anyone hoping that life may have sprung up on the frigid Saturn satellite.

"When you have a situation like this, where the ocean is sitting next to the rock, there's a greater likelihood of some interesting chemistry," Stevenson said.

Europa's sea similarly abuts rock, while some other satellites — such as Jupiter's huge moon Ganymede — appear to have subsurface seas that touch only ice above and below, he added.

Indeed, the similarities between Europa and Enceladus continue to mount. Late last year, for example, researchers announced the discovery of water-vapor plumes erupting from Europa's south polar region.


http://news.yahoo.com/hidden-ocean-found-saturns-icy-moon-enceladus-could-182015492.html

Offline Geo

Re: Discovery Of Underground Water Means Saturn's Moon Could Hold Life
« Reply #2 on: April 04, 2014, 02:24:28 pm »
Liquid water on Titan (mentioned in the first article)?

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Re: Discovery Of Underground Water Means Saturn's Moon Could Hold Life
« Reply #3 on: April 04, 2014, 02:48:44 pm »
What about it?

Offline Geo

Re: Discovery Of Underground Water Means Saturn's Moon Could Hold Life
« Reply #4 on: April 04, 2014, 04:13:39 pm »
I thought lakes of liquid hydrocarbons (methane/ethane) existed on Titan, not water.
But reading the wiki on Titan, there seems to be suggestions that (a) subsurface ammonia/water mix 'ocean(s)' should exist. Hadn't heard about the latter.

 

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