NASA says
it has confirmed that an ocean lies beneath the icy crust that forms the
surface of Jupiter's largest moon Ganymede. The presence of a deep ocean there
means Ganymede may be capable of sustaining life.
Deutsche Welle, 13 March 2015
Ganymede -
the largest moon in the solar system - has a salty ocean underneath the icy
shell that surrounds it, NASA said on Thursday.
The ocean
is believed to be far deeper than any on Earth - some 100 kilometers (60 miles)
deep and buried under some 150 kilometers of ice.
The ocean
was detected by scientists using the Hubble Space Telescope, which observed
Ganymede's magnetic field. The telescope looked at changes that took place to
the moon's colorful polar auroras - similar to the Earth's aurora borealis -
which give an indication about what lies beneath the surface of moons and
planets.
There has
long been speculation that Ganymede could have an ocean, although proof had
been elusive, despite tantalizing clues sent back by NASA's Galileo spacecraft.
Scientists now say they are sure.
"Since
the 1970s, there were speculations and models that Ganymede could possess an
ocean," said Joachim Saur of the University of Cologne in Germany.
"We do not have these ambiguities anymore," he told reporters, with
the Hubble findings providing: "the best evidence to date for the
existence of an ocean on Ganymede."
The four big moons, with Ganymede the largest, were all discovered the same year - in 1610 - by Galileo |
With a
diameter of 5,260 kilometers, Ganymede is slightly larger than the planet
Mercury.
More
'waterworlds' dicovered
On
Wednesday, a separate team of scientists reported that one of Saturn's moons,
Enceladus, may have hot springs bubbling beneath its cold surface. There is
also believed to be water below the surface of Jupiter's moon Europa, while
another of the planet's moons, Callisto, is thought to have subterranean water.
"The
solar system is now looking like a pretty soggy place," said NASA
headquarters head of planetary science Jill Green, after the latest find.
Ganymede is
one of dozens of confirmed moons that orbit Jupiter, and it is among the four
large moons of the planet that were discovered in 1610, by the Italian scientist
Galileo.
The
prospect of a "deep ocean under the icy crust of Ganymede opens up further
possibilities for life beyond Earth," said John Grunsfeld, a NASA
administrator.
A European
Space Agency mission to be launched in 2022 is expected to circle Jupiter and
take a closer look at the moons, including Ganymede.
rc/bw (AFP, AP, dpa, Reuters)
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