How Many Other Oceans Exist in Our Solar System?

How Many Other Oceans Exist in Our Solar System? | line4k – The Ultimate IPTV Experience – Watch Anytime, Anywhere

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Think of the last time you had your feet in the ocean. While you were there, did you ever imagine what an ocean on another world might be like? Would it be a different color, a different temperature? Would the waves be taller or the water populated with strange alien creatures? What sort of sky might that sit under? Whatever you were picturing, Im willing to bet it was on a planet orbiting around a far-flung star. But it turns out that our very own solar system is populated with hidden oceans, trapped not under alien skies, but icy ceilings—and, according to new research, scientists have just uncovered another.

One of the moons of Uranus, named Miranda, has only been visited up close (and very briefly) once, way back in 1986 by NASAs Voyager 2 spacecraft. Like many nearby moons, its a ball of ice, one that scientists suspected was frozen throughout. But at the time, some planetary astronomers noted its intriguing features, including a weird mangle of grooves in its southern hemisphere. What might have made them? What sort of geologic activity is responsible?

For a new study, published in October in the Planetary Science Journal, scientists mapped out all these grooves, then ran models to test what sort of turbulent activity could have forged them. Their best answer is that deep below a thick icy crust is a convulsing ocean. They suspect that the ocean is slowly freezing, but that its still there, today—giving scientists another place that may have, at some point, been amenable to life, and perhaps contained (or contains) life itself.


That Miranda possibly contains an ocean is inherently remarkable, not least because, unlike Earths oceans, Mirandas is hidden in darkness beneath an icy shell, and its never seen sunlight. Imagining the sort of life that may dwell, or might have dwelled, in that ocean—the sort that cannot rely on photosynthesis—is an entertaining thought experiment and recalls some of the weirder animals and microbes that exist on Earth’s own abyssal seafloors, which exist in a state of permanent night.

But for planetary scientists, this new study and potential ocean fit in with a surprising recent trend: The solar system is filled with invisible oceans trapped beneath frigid carapaces. And thats forcing scientists to reconsider what they refer to as a habitable world. Earth is a biological nirvana. But if these moons have (potentially) habitable—if not necessarily inhabited—oceans, then perhaps we shouldnt consider Earth as the archetypical example of a life-supporting island in the cosmos. In fact, it may be a rarity, with these oceanic moons being the norm.

Uranus’s moon Miranda (left), Saturn’s moon Enceladus (center), and Jupiter’s moon Europa (right) are three of the moons in our solar system suspected to have oceans of liquid water beneath their outer surfaces. NASA / Public Domain

Lets step back for a moment. In the 1970s, most astronomers and planetary scientists suspected that the plentiful icy moons orbiting the planets of the outer solar system—Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune—were entirely frozen through. Today, thanks to a fleet of sleuthing spacecraft that have remotely probed the internal structure of some of these moons, scientists know that several of these natural satellites have liquid-water oceans. Saturns Enceladus definitely has one sloshing about below its ice shell, which constantly erupts into space via huge chasms on its southern polar region. Jupiters Europa almost certainly has one, and NASAs Europa Clipper mission, which launched in October, is going to confirm this, while checking to see if that ocean is also amenable to life.

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