Body Of Water Is About The Size Of The Great Lakes
Data from a NASA planetary mission have provided scientists
evidence of what appears to be a body of liquid water, equal in
volume to the North American Great Lakes, beneath the icy surface
of Jupiter's moon, Europa. The data suggest there is significant
exchange between Europa's icy shell and the ocean beneath. This
information could bolster arguments that Europa's global subsurface
ocean represents a potential habitat for life elsewhere in our
solar system. The findings are published in the scientific journal
Nature.
Photo Credit Britney Schmidt, U of Texas,
Austin
"The data opens up some compelling possibilities," said Mary
Voytek, director of NASA's Astrobiology Program at agency
headquarters in Washington. "However, scientists worldwide will
want to take a close look at this analysis and review the data
before we can fully appreciate the implication of these
results."
NASA's Galileo spacecraft, launched by the space shuttle
Atlantis in 1989 to Jupiter, produced numerous discoveries and
provided scientists decades of data to analyze. Galileo studied
Jupiter, which is the most massive planet in the solar system, and
some of its many moons. One of the most significant discoveries was
the inference of a global salt water ocean below the surface of
Europa. This ocean is deep enough to cover the whole surface of
Europa and contains more liquid water than all of Earth's oceans
combined. However, being far from the sun, the ocean surface is
completely frozen. Most scientists think this ice crust is tens of
miles thick. "One opinion in the scientific community has been if
the ice shell is thick, that's bad for biology. That might mean the
surface isn't communicating with the underlying ocean," said
Britney Schmidt, lead author of the paper and postdoctoral fellow
at the Institute for Geophysics, University of Texas at Austin.
"Now, we see evidence that it's a thick ice shell that can mix
vigorously and new evidence for giant shallow lakes. That could
make Europa and its ocean more habitable."
Schmidt and her team focused on Galileo images of two roughly
circular, bumpy features on Europa's surface called chaos terrains.
Based on similar processes seen on Earth -- on ice shelves and
under glaciers overlaying volcanoes -- they developed a four-step
model to explain how the features form. The model resolves several
conflicting observations. Some seemed to suggest the ice shell is
thick. Others suggest it is thin.
Galileo Spacecraft NASA Image

This recent analysis shows the chaos features on Europa's
surface may be formed by mechanisms that involve significant
exchange between the icy shell and the underlying lake. This
provides a mechanism or model for transferring nutrients and energy
between the surface and the vast global ocean already inferred to
exist below the thick ice shell. This is thought to increase the
potential for life there.
The study authors have good reason to believe their model is
correct, based on observations of Europa from Galileo and of Earth.
Still, because the inferred lakes are several miles below the
surface, the only true confirmation of their presence would come
from a future spacecraft mission designed to probe the ice shell.
Such a mission was rated as the second highest priority flagship
mission by the National Research Council's recent Planetary Science
Decadal Survey and is being studied by NASA. "This new
understanding of processes on Europa would not have been possible
without the foundation of the last 20 years of observations over
Earth's ice sheets and floating ice shelves," said Don Blankenship,
a co-author and senior research scientist at the Institute for
Geophysics, where he leads airborne radar studies of the planet's
ice sheets.
Galileo was the first spacecraft to directly measure Jupiter's
atmosphere with a probe and conduct long-term observations of the
Jovian system. The probe was the first to fly by an asteroid and
discover the moon of an asteroid. NASA extended the mission three
times to take advantage of Galileo's unique science capabilities,
and it was put on a collision course into Jupiter's atmosphere in
September 2003 to eliminate any chance of impacting Europa.