12 December 2013 Last updated at 11:03 ET  
Jupiter's  icy moon Europa 
'spouts  water'
By James  Morgan and Rebecca Morelle Science reporters,  BBC News
 
 
 

 
Water spouts taller than Mt Everest appear to burst out of Europa when it  
is farthest from Jupiter
 
--------------------
 
 
Water may be spouting from Jupiter's  icy moon Europa - considered one of 
the best places to find alien life in the  Solar System. 
Images by the Hubble Space Telescope show surpluses of hydrogen and oxygen 
in  the moon's southern hemisphere, say astronomers _writing in  Science 
journal_ (http://www.sciencemag.org/lookup/doi/10.1126/science.1247051) . 
If confirmed as water vapour plumes, it raises hopes that Europa's  
underground ocean can be accessed from its surface. 
_Future  missions_ (http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-17917102) 
 could probe these seas for _signs of  life_ 
(http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-25349395) . 
Nasa's planetary science chief Dr James Green told BBC News: "The presence 
of  the water has led scientists to speculate that the Europa we know today 
harbours  life. 
"The plumes are incredibly exciting if they are there - they are bringing 
up  material from the ocean. Perhaps there are organic molecules lying there 
on the  surface of Europa." 
The findings were reported at the _American Geophysical Union (AGU) Fall  
Meeting_ (http://fallmeeting.agu.org/2013/)  in San Francisco, California. 
Scientists discovered the enormous fountains in images taken by Hubble in  
November and December of last year, as well as older images from 1999. 
Signatures of water (blue)  detected by Hubble are overlayed on an image of 
Europa 
 
They saw evidence of water being broken apart into hydrogen and oxygen over 
 the south polar regions of Europa. 
"They are consistent with two 200-km-high (125 mile-high) plumes of water  
vapour," said lead author Lorenz Roth, of Southwest Research Institute in 
San  Antonio, Texas. 
Every second, seven tonnes of material is ejected from the moon's surface.  
Dr Kurt Retherford, also of the Southwest Research Institute, told the AGU  
meeting: "This is just an amazing amount.  
"It is travelling at 700m a second... All of this gas comes out, and almost 
 all falls back towards the surface - it doesn't escape out into space." 
These plumes appear to be transient - they arise for just seven hours at a  
time. 
They peak when Europa is at its farthest from Jupiter (the apocentre of its 
 orbit) and vanish when it comes closest (the pericentre). 
This means that tidal acceleration could be driving water spouting - by  
opening cracks in the surface ice, the researchers propose. 
The team is not yet sure whether these fissures go all the way down to the  
liquid water beneath the moon's icy crust, or whether some other mechanism 
is  bringing the vapour to the surface. 
The researchers also want to investigate whether the plumes are similar to  
those seen on Saturn's moon Enceladus, where high-pressure vapour emissions 
 escape from very narrow cracks on the body's surface. 
"We have a lot of questions about how this works," said Dr Retherford. 
"How thick is the ice crust? Are there lakes and ponds embedded within the  
layers of the ice? Do these cracks go down really deep, do they really 
touch the  liquid water down below?  
"We don't know all of these things." 
The team said exploration for Europa should now be made a priority. 
The US Space Agency has made some preliminary plans for a mission to the 
moon  - the Europa Clipper, which could fly past the plumes.  
However, budgetary constraints mean it may not happen for some time. 
Dr Green said: "The Europa Clipper is a very expensive venture. It is  
expensive because it is designed to last for a fairly long period of time,  
potentially a year or a number of years in a very harsh radioactive 
environment. 
 
"So consequently that is what we would call a flagship.  
"And right now, the budget horizon is such that we are deferring that kind 
of  mission later into the decade." 
The next realistic opportunity to study the jets up close is therefore the  
European Space Agency's Juice mission. 
Due to launch to the Jovian system in 2022, the satellite will make two 
close  flybys of the ice-encrusted moon in the 2030s. With luck, its 
instrumentation  will get close enough to directly sample the plumes. 
Dr Retherford, who is also an investigator on a US instrument on Juice,  
cautioned that the European flybys would go close to the equator, whereas the  
Hubble data had only seen the plume activity at the southern pole so far: 
"We  have probably observed only one of the largest plumes on Europa.  
"There could be a lot of plumes, more like 10-50km high, and we're just not 
 seeing them with our current data-sets. So it's not improbable that the 
Juice  mission could be flying through some sort of plume near the equator, in 
which  case we'd still have a chance to sniff out the composition of the 
gases coming  off and do all sorts of other interesting studies," he told BBC 
News. 

-- 
-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.
  • [RC] Th... BILROJ via Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community

Reply via email to