Credit NASA |
Inside
a moon of Saturn, beneath its icy veneer and above its rocky core, is a
sea of water the size of Lake Superior, scientists announced on
Thursday.
The findings, published in the journal Science,
confirm what planetary scientists have suspected about the moon, #Enceladus, ever since they were astonished in 2005 by photographs
showing geysers of ice crystals shooting out of its south pole.
“What
we’ve done is put forth a strong case for an ocean,” said David J.
Stevenson, a professor of planetary science at the California Institute
of Technology and an author of the Science paper.
For many researchers, this tiny, shiny cue-ball of a moon, just over 300 miles wide, is now the most promising place to look for life elsewhere in the solar system, even more than Mars.
“Definitely
Enceladus,” said Larry W. Esposito, a professor of astrophysical and
planetary sciences at the University of Colorado, who was not involved
in the research. “Because there’s warm water right there now.”
Enceladus
(pronounced en-SELL-a-dus) is caught in a gravitational tug of war
between Saturn and another moon, Dione, which bends its icy outer layer,
creating friction and heat. In the years since discovering the geysers,
NASA’s Cassini spacecraft has made repeated flybys of Enceladus,
photographing the fissures (nicknamed tiger stripes) where the geysers
originate, measuring temperatures and identifying carbon-based organic
molecules that could serve as building blocks for life.
Cassini
has no instruments that can directly detect water beneath the surface,
but three flybys in the years 2010-12 were devoted to producing a map of
the gravity field, noting where the pull was stronger or weaker. During
the flybys, lasting just a few minutes, radio telescopes that are part
of NASA’s Deep #Space Network broadcast a signal to the spacecraft, which
echoed it back to Earth. As the pull of Enceladus’ gravity sped and
then slowed the spacecraft, the frequency of the radio signal shifted,
just as the pitch of a train whistle rises and falls as it passes by a
listener.
Using
atomic clocks on Earth, the scientists measured the radio frequency
with enough precision that they could discern changes in the velocity of
Cassini, hundreds of millions of miles away, as minuscule as 14 inches
an hour.
They
found that the moon’s gravity was weaker at the south pole. At first
glance, that is not so surprising; there is a depression at the pole,
and lower mass means less gravity. But the depression is so large that
the gravity should actually have been weaker.
“Then
you say, ‘Aha, there must be compensation,'” Dr. Stevenson said.
“Something more dense under the ice. The natural candidate is water.”
Liquid
water is 8 percent denser than ice, so the presence of a sea 20 to 25
miles below the surface fits the gravity measurements. “It’s an ocean
that extends in all directions from the south pole to about halfway to
the equator,” Dr. Stevenson said.
The
underground sea is up to six miles thick, much deeper than a lake.
“It’s a lot more water than Lake Superior,” Dr. Stevenson said. “It may
even be bigger. The ocean could extend all the way to the north pole.”
The
conclusion was not a surprise, said Christopher P. McKay, a planetary
scientist at NASA Ames Research Center in Mountain View, Calif., who
studies the possibility of life on other worlds, but “it confirms in a
really robust way what has been sort of been the standard model.”
It
also makes Enceladus a more attractive destination for a future
mission, especially one that would collect samples from the plumes and
return them to Earth to see if they contain any microbes.
The
discussion on the possibility of extraterrestrial life in the solar
system centers on four bodies: Mars, Enceladus, Jupiter’s moon Europa,
and Titan, another moon of Saturn.
Dr.
McKay, who was not involved with gravity measurements, noted that only
Enceladus was known to possess the four essential ingredients for life,
at least as it exists on Earth: liquid water, energy, carbon and
nitrogen.
“I would say it’s our best bet,” he said.
Mars
has a dearth of nitrogen, found in amino acids and proteins, and the
surface today is dry and cold. Europa, which also possesses an under-ice
ocean, may have all of the ingredients, but that has not been
confirmed. Ice plumes have also been observed coming off Europa’s south
pole, but intermittently. Titan is the most intriguing and speculative
possibility, with lakes of liquid methane, not water. If life existed
there, it would be far different from that on Earth.
Still,
life on Enceladus is perhaps a long shot. The sea is at freezing
temperature and in continual darkness. And the water may have been
liquid only in the recent past, a few tens of millions of years, a blink
in the 4.5-billion-year history of the solar system. But scientists
also do not know how long it takes life to get started, and some think
it could happen quickly.
“Is there life in the plume?” Dr. McKay said. “To answer that question, a sample return would be the way.”
There
are a couple of proposals for that already, including one by Peter
Tsou, a retired scientist from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory. Dr.
Tsou devised a way to capture comet particles and bring them back to
Earth for NASA’s Stardust mission and has been suggesting a similar method for a spacecraft that would fly through Enceladus’ plumes and then return to Earth for scientists to examine.
The
challenges are to make sure that the interesting particles would not
break apart, to take precautions that any alien life would not infect
Earth, and to fit it into the $500 million budget of one of NASA’s
lower-cost planetary missions.
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