(CNN)For
the first time, scientists have discovered the presence of water vapor
above the surface on Europa, Jupiter's icy moon first visited by one of
the Voyager probes 40 years ago.
This adds to the intrigue of other previously discovered factors associated with the potential for life on Europa. The findings were published in the journal Nature Astronomy on Monday.
The
research team observed Europa using the W. M. Keck Observatory in
Hawaii -- one of the biggest telescopes in the world -- for 17 nights
between 2016 and 2017. On one of those nights, they detected the signal
for water vapor. The
researchers observed 5,202 pounds of water releasing from Europa per
second, which could fill an Olympic-size swimming pool within minutes,
according to NASA.
"Essential chemical elements and sources
of energy, two of [the] three requirements for life, are found all over
the solar system. But the third — liquid water — is somewhat hard to
find beyond Earth," said Lucas Paganini, study author and NASA planetary
scientist. "While scientists have not yet detected liquid water
directly, we've found the next best thing: water in vapor form."
But this amount is infrequent -- at least when scientists are trying to observe it from Earth.
"For
me, the interesting thing about this work is not only the first direct
detection of water above Europa, but also the lack thereof within the
limits of our detection method," Paganini said.
How Europa could host life
Research
suggesting the possibility of an ocean on Europa was published as early
as 1977, after the Voyager mission observed long lines and dark spots
instead of a cratered surface similar to other moons. Then the Galileo
spacecraft reached Europa in 1996 and revealed for the first time that
there was an ocean on another planet.
During
its closest flyby of Europa in 1997, less than 93 miles above the
surface, Galileo collected signatures of changes in Europa's magnetic
field that the scientists didn't understand, said Margaret Kivelson, professor emerita of space physics at the University of California, Los Angeles.
Last
year, Kivelson and her colleagues took a closer look at that data. They
realized that during the flyby, Galileo flew through a plume -- a burst
of liquid from Europa's ocean that pierces through the moon's icy
shell. This fortuitous happenstance is the best evidence of plumes to
date, the study said.
While Galileo didn't know it was flying
through a plume and was incapable of collecting material from it, an
upcoming mission with the Europa Clipper will be able to gather samples
from plumes if it can fly through them. This would allow scientists a
first look at the material inside Europa's ocean that's spewing through
the icy crust, and that could reveal whether Europa's ocean is
habitable.
As Paganini noted, the
necessary ingredients for life as we know it include liquid water,
energy sources and chemicals such as carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen,
sulfur and phosphorus. Europa and Saturn's moon Enceladus show some of
these key ingredients for life in their oceans, which is why researchers
believe they are the best chance for finding life beyond Earth in our
own solar system.
Europa Clipper's instruments will be
capable of "sniffing" the atmosphere of the moon, with more than 40
planned flybys. The flybys will be less than 228 miles above the surface
of Europa and within the observed range of the plumes, which can reach
124 to 228 miles above the surface.
"If
plumes exist and we can directly sample what's coming from the interior
of Europa, then we can more easily get at whether Europa has the
ingredients for life," said Robert Pappalardo, Europa Clipper project
scientist. "That's what the mission is after. That's the big picture."
Europa
has been a high priority for scientists because, as an ice-covered moon
with a subsurface salty liquid ocean, it has been identified as one of
the ideal spots for hosting life. And a recent study found the presence
of table salt on Europa earlier this year.
The Europa Clipper, named for the
streamlined sailing ships of the 1800s, could launch as early as 2023,
but a targeted launch has been set for 2025. It is expected to reach
Europa after a journey lasting several years.
Europa
Clipper will carry cameras and spectrometers to capture images and
determine the composition of the moon. Ice-penetrating radar will
measure the thickness of the ice shell covering the ocean, and help
search for the subsurface lakes believed to be there -- much like those
in Antarctica on Earth. A magnetometer can determine the strength and
direction of the moon's magnetic field to understand how deep the ocean
goes and its salinity.
Ashley Strickland
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.