Europa's plumes make Jupiter moon a prime
candidate for life
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[May 15, 2018]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A new look at old
data is giving scientists a fresh reason to view Europa, a moon of
Jupiter, as a leading candidate in the search for life beyond Earth,
with evidence of water plumes shooting into space.
A bend in Europa's magnetic field observed by NASA's Galileo spacecraft
during a 1997 flyby appears to have been caused by a geyser gushing
through its frozen crust from a subsurface ocean, researchers who
reexamined the Galileo data reported on Monday.
Galileo was passing some 124 miles (200 kilometers) above Europa's
surface when it apparently flew through the plume.
"We know that Europa has a lot of the ingredients necessary for life,
certainly for life as we know it. There's water. There's energy. There's
some amount of carbon material. But the habitability of Europa is one of
the big questions that we want to understand," said planetary scientist
Elizabeth Turtle of Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory.
"And one of the really exciting things about detection of a plume is
that that means there may be ways that the material from the ocean --
which is likely the most habitable part of Europa because it's warmer
and it's protected from the radiation environment by the ice shell -- to
come out above the ice shell. And that means we'd be able to sample it,"
Turtle told a NASA briefing.
The research, headed by University of Michigan space physicist Xianzhe
Jia, was published in the journal Nature Astronomy.
The findings support other evidence of plumes from Europa, whose ocean
may contain twice the volume of all Earth's oceans. NASA's Hubble Space
Telescope in 2012 collected ultraviolet data suggestive of a plume.
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A view of Jupiter's moon Europa created from images taken by NASA's
Galileo spacecraft in the late 1990's, according to NASA, obtained
by Reuters May 14, 2018. NASA/JPL-Caltech/SETI Institute/ Handout
via REUTERS
NASA will get a close-up look from a new spacecraft during its
Europa Clipper mission that could launch as soon as June 2022,
providing a possible opportunity to sample plumes for signs of life,
perhaps microbial, from its ocean.
Europa is considered among the prime candidates for life in our
solar system, but is not the only one. For example, NASA's Cassini
spacecraft sampled plumes from Saturn's ocean-bearing moon Enceladus
that contained hydrogen from hydrothermal vents, an environment that
may have given rise to life on Earth.
A bit smaller that Earth's moon, Europa's ocean resides under an ice
layer 10 to 15 miles (15 to 25 km) thick, with an estimated depth of
40 to 100 miles (60 to 150 km).
(Reporting by Will Dunham; Editing by Sandra Maler)
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