Extraterrestrial life in our solar system
just got a lot more likely: NASA has found convincing evidence that Ganymede
and Enceladus, moons of Jupiter and Saturn respectively, might both harbor
salty oceans beneath their frozen surface. Scientists estimate that the
oceans are over 50 miles thick (80 km), which greatly increases the chances of
alien life.
This cutaway view of Saturn’s moon
Enceladus is an artist’s rendering that depicts possible hydrothermal activity
that may be taking place on and under the seafloor of the moon’s subsurface
ocean, based on recently published results from NASA’s Cassini mission. NASA/JPL
In order for life to exist (at least life as
we know it), there needs to be water; if the water contains salt, it gets even
better, because water on Earth evolved from salty water.
“There are possibilities of there being life
in the Jupiter-orbiting moon Ganymede”, said the NASA scientists who confirmed
to have discovered an ocean beneath Ganymede.
The problem is that the ocean sits under a
95-mile-thick sheet of ice, which makes it incredibly difficult to study. But
it’s highly exciting to discover potential life in such an unexpected place.
“After spending so many years going after
Mars, which is so dry and so bereft of organics and so just plain dead, it’s
wonderful to go to the outer solar system and find water, water everywhere,”
Christopher P. McKay, a planetary scientist at NASA’s Ames Research Center in
Mountain View, California, told the New York Times.
Enceladus
In this artist’s concept, the moon
Ganymede orbits the giant planet Jupiter. NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope
observed aurorae on the moon generated by Ganymede’s magnetic fields. A saline
ocean under the moon’s icy crust best explains shifting in the auroral belts
measured by Hubble. NASA/ESA
Enceladus is the sixth-largest moon of
Saturn. It was discovered in 1789 by William Herschel, but very little was
known about it until the Voyager fly-bys in the 1980s. We recently learned even
more about it thanks to the Cassini spacecraft. We know that
it has a type of tectonics, geysers, and there were some indications that it has an ocean under all its ice.
Because hydrothermal
activity (such as the geysers) on Earth occurs when seawater infiltrates and
reacts with a rocky crust, researchers concluded that this must also be what is
happening on Enceladus. This theory was further supported with the discovery of
methane plume over the moon’s south pole and microscopic granules of
silica, which are the building blocks of many rocks on Earth.
“It’s very
exciting that we can use these tiny grains of rock, spewed into space by
geysers, to tell us about conditions on — and beneath — the ocean floor of an
icy moon,” Sean Hsu from the University of Colorado at Boulder and the lead
author of the paper published in the journal Nature, said, in a statement.
Ganymede
NASA Hubble Space Telescope images of
Ganymede’s auroral belts (colored blue in this illustration) are overlaid on a
Galileo orbiter image of the moon. The amount of rocking of the moon’s magnetic
field suggests that the moon has a subsurface saltwater ocean. NASA/ESA
Ganymede
is just as interesting – it is the largest moon of Jupiter and in the Solar
System, and the only moon known to have a magnetosphere.
It’s this magnetosphere that actually helped scientists, because tocean
interferes with the magnetic field, reducing the rocking of the auroras by 4
degrees. To have this kind of effect on the magnetic field, scientists estimate
that the ocean is 60 miles thick. Because of its proximity to Jupiter,
Ganymede’s magnetic field is affected by the planet’s, rocking it back and
forth – this movement generates internal heat which melts the ice and creates a
liquid ocean under the surface.
“Because aurorae are controlled by the magnetic field, if you observe
the aurorae in an appropriate way, you learn something about the magnetic
field. If you know the magnetic field, then you know something about the moon’s
interior,” Joachim Saur from the University of Cologne in Germany, and the lead
author of the paper, said, in a statement.
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