in 2005 casini discovered water plume on enceladus- nasa
- Postmodernmonk

- Posts: 87
- Joined: Thu Jan 15, 2009 3:43 am
You might like:
GREENBELT, Md., Oct. 7 (UPI) -- A moon of Saturn that should be frozen solid may have liquid oceans, thanks to a "wobble" it experiences as it orbits the ringed planet, researchers say.
With temperatures around 324 degrees below zero Fahrenheit, the surface of Enceladus is indeed frozen, but in 2005 NASA's Cassini spacecraft discovered a giant plume of water gushing from cracks in the surface over the moon's south pole, suggesting there was a reservoir of water beneath the ice, a release from NASA's Goddard Space Center said Thursday.
Analysis of the plume by Cassini shows the water is salty, indicating the reservoir is large, perhaps even a global subsurface ocean.
Scientists estimate the south polar heating is equivalent to a continuous release of about 13 billion watts of energy.
Researchers say tidal heating may be keeping Enceladus warm enough for liquid water to remain under its surface.
Enceladus' orbit around Saturn is slightly oval-shaped and the moon moves closer in and then farther away as it travels around the planet. The fluctuating gravitational tug on Enceladus causes it to flex slightly, and the flexing, called gravitational tidal forcing, generates heat from friction deep within Enceladus.
Also, the moon's rotation as it orbits may not be uniform, scientists say, and additional heat caused by this "wobble" could be five times as much as that created by tidal heating.
The extra heat makes it likely that Enceladus' ocean could be long-lived, significant to a search for life on the orbiting moon, because life requires a stable environment to develop, NASA scientists say.
With temperatures around 324 degrees below zero Fahrenheit, the surface of Enceladus is indeed frozen, but in 2005 NASA's Cassini spacecraft discovered a giant plume of water gushing from cracks in the surface over the moon's south pole, suggesting there was a reservoir of water beneath the ice, a release from NASA's Goddard Space Center said Thursday.
Analysis of the plume by Cassini shows the water is salty, indicating the reservoir is large, perhaps even a global subsurface ocean.
Scientists estimate the south polar heating is equivalent to a continuous release of about 13 billion watts of energy.
Researchers say tidal heating may be keeping Enceladus warm enough for liquid water to remain under its surface.
Enceladus' orbit around Saturn is slightly oval-shaped and the moon moves closer in and then farther away as it travels around the planet. The fluctuating gravitational tug on Enceladus causes it to flex slightly, and the flexing, called gravitational tidal forcing, generates heat from friction deep within Enceladus.
Also, the moon's rotation as it orbits may not be uniform, scientists say, and additional heat caused by this "wobble" could be five times as much as that created by tidal heating.
The extra heat makes it likely that Enceladus' ocean could be long-lived, significant to a search for life on the orbiting moon, because life requires a stable environment to develop, NASA scientists say.
-
- Related topics
- Replies
- Views
- Last post
-
- Clever Casini probe and Enceladus
by aardvaaks » Tue Feb 09, 2010 11:26 am - 0 Replies
- 146 Views
- Last post by aardvaaks

Tue Feb 09, 2010 11:26 am
- Clever Casini probe and Enceladus
-
- Massive Magma Plume Discovered Under Southern Africa
by savwafair2012 » Wed Jun 23, 2010 6:48 pm - 0 Replies
- 177 Views
- Last post by savwafair2012

Wed Jun 23, 2010 6:48 pm
- Massive Magma Plume Discovered Under Southern Africa
-
- Signs of liquid water found on Enceladus
by abyssdnb » Tue Feb 09, 2010 3:10 pm - 1 Replies
- 153 Views
- Last post by bugmenot

Tue Feb 09, 2010 3:37 pm
- Signs of liquid water found on Enceladus
-
- Source Found: Saturn Gets Rained Water from Moon Enceladus!
by slamgunshark » Wed Jul 27, 2011 1:34 am - 0 Replies
- 335 Views
- Last post by slamgunshark

Wed Jul 27, 2011 1:34 am
- Source Found: Saturn Gets Rained Water from Moon Enceladus!
-
- NASA Observes Ash Plume of Icelandic Volcano
by kingz » Sun May 09, 2010 7:12 am - 7 Replies
- 1252 Views
- Last post by kathaksung

Mon Aug 16, 2010 9:03 pm
- NASA Observes Ash Plume of Icelandic Volcano

