SAN
FRANCISCO: New observations from the Hubble Space Telescope show jets
of water vapor blasting off the southern pole of Europa, an ice-covered
moon of Jupiter that is believed to hold an underground ocean,
scientists said on Thursday.
If
confirmed, the discovery could affect scientists' assessments of
whether the moon has the right conditions for life, planetary scientist
Kurt Retherford, with the Southwest Research Institute in San Antonio,
Texas, told reporters at the American Geophysical Union conference in
San Francisco.
"We've
only seen this at one location right now, so to try to infer that
there's a global effect as a result of this is a little difficult at
this time," Retherford said.
Researchers
using the Hubble Space Telescope found 125-mile-high (200-km-high)
plumes of water vapor shooting off from Europa's south polar region in
December 2012.
The
jets were not seen during Hubble observations of the same region in
October 1999 and November 2012. The now-defunct Galileo spacecraft,
which made nine passes by Europa in the late 1990s, likewise did not
detect any plumes.
Scientists
believe the water vapor may be escaping from cracks in Europa's
southern polar ice that open due to gravitational stresses when the moon
is farthest from Jupiter.
"When
Europa is close to Jupiter, it gets stressed and the poles get squished
and the cracks close up. Then, as it moves further away from Jupiter,
it becomes un-squished, the pole moves outward and that's when the
cracks open," said planetary scientist Francis Nimmo, with the
University of California in Santa Cruz.
The
plumes also could be the result of frictional heating from rubbing ice
blocks or a fortuitously timed comet impact, scientists said.
Similar
jets have been detected on Saturn's moon Enceladus, which because it
has 12 times less gravity than Europa, can shoot its plumes much farther
into space.
Scientists
find it interesting that both Europa and Enceladus, which is being
studied by the Saturn-orbiting Cassini spacecraft, are pumping out about
the same amount of water vapor, roughly seven tons per second.
"We were really kind of surprised by the number ... and we're grasping what that means," Retherford said.
Additional
Hubble observations are planned, as well as a review of archived
Galileo data taken when Europa was farthest away from Jupiter.
"Now
that we know where (the plumes) are, that narrows the window that we
have in comparison to the passes that we've made," said NASA's planetary
sciences chief, Jim Green.
"I think we'll have some other great results, or another controversy," he said. (Reuters)

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