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April 5, 2014 from HoustonChronicle Website
This illustration shows the possible interior of Saturn's moon Enceladus, an icy outer shell and a low density, rocky core
with an ocean
sandwiched in between.
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.
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.
This undated photo provided by NASA on April 2, 2014 shows Saturn's moon Enceladus. The "tiger stripes" are long fractures from which water vapor jets are emitted. Scientists have uncovered a vast ocean beneath the icy surface of the moon, they announced Thursday, April 3, 2014. Italian and American researchers made the discovery using Cassini, a NASA-European spacecraft still exploring Saturn and its rings 17 years after its launch from Cape Canaveral.
(AP Photo/NASA, JPL,
Space Science Institute)
But the depression is so large that the gravity should actually have been much weaker.
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.
The underground sea is up to 6 miles thick, much deeper than a lake.
This photo provided by NASA shows water vapor jets, emitted from the southern polar region of Saturn's moon Enceladus. Scientists have uncovered a vast ocean beneath the icy surface of the moon, they announced Thursday, April 3, 2014. Italian and American researchers made the discovery using Cassini, a NASA-European spacecraft still exploring Saturn and its rings 17 years after its launch from Cape Canaveral.
(AP Photo/NASA, JPL,
Caltec, Space Science Institute)
The conclusion was not a surprise, said Christopher McKay, a planetary scientist at NASA Ames Research Center in Mountain View, Calif., who studies the possibility of life on other worlds, ,
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.
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