. Military Space News .
Europan Ice Domes Could Be First Place To Look For Life

As long as life can evolve hard radiation resistance then life on Europa is a virtual certainty.

Boulder - Sep 03, 2003
A new University of Colorado at Boulder study of Jupiter's moon Europa may help explain the origin of the giant ice domes peppering its surface and the implications for discovering evidence of past or present life forms there.

Assistant Professor Robert Pappalardo and doctoral student Amy Barr previously believed the mysterious domes may be formed by blobs of ice from the interior of the frozen shell that were being pushed upward by thermal upwelling from warmer ice underneath. Europa is believed to harbor an ocean beneath its icy surface.

But the scientists now think the dome creation also requires small amounts of impurities, such as sodium chloride or sulfuric acid. Basically the equivalent of table salt or battery acid, these compounds melt ice at low temperatures, allowing warmer, more pristine blobs of ice to force the icy surface up in places, creating the domes.

"We have been trying for some time to understand how these ice blobs can push up through the frozen shell of Europa, which is likely about 13 miles thick," said Pappalardo of the astrophysical and planetary sciences department. "Our models now show that a combination of upwelling warm ice in the frozen shell's interior, combined with small amounts of impurities such as sodium chloride or sulfuric acid, would provide enough of a force to form these domes."

A paper on the subject co-authored by Pappalardo and Barr was presented at the annual Division of Planetary Sciences Meeting held Sept. 2 through Sept. 6 in Monterey, Calif. DPS is an arm of the American Astronomical Society.

Europa appears to have strong tidal action as it elliptically orbits Jupiter - strong enough "to squeeze the moon" and heat its interior, said Pappalardo. "Warm ice blobs rise upward through the ice shell toward the colder surface, melting out saltier regions in their path. The less dense blobs can continue rising all the way to the surface to create the observed domes."

The domes are huge - some more than four miles in diameter and 300 feet high - and are found in clusters on Europa's surface, said Barr, who did much of the modeling. "We are excited about our research, because we think it now is possible that any present or past life or even just the chemistry of the ocean may be lifted to the surface, forming these domes. It essentially would be like an elevator ride for microbes."

Barr likened the upwelling of warmer ice from the inner ice shell to its surface to a pot of boiling spaghetti sauce. "The burner under the pan sends the hottest sauce to the top, creating the bubbles at the surface," she said. "The trouble is Europa's icy skin is as cold and as hard as a rock."

The idea that either small amounts of salt or sulfuric acid might help to create Europa's domes was Pappalardo's, who knew about similar domes on Earth that form in clumps in arid regions. On Earth, it is salt that is buoyant enough to move up through cracks and fissures in rock formations to form dome clusters at the surface.

"In addition, infrared and color images taken of Europa by NASA's Galileo spacecraft seem to indicate some of the ice on the surface of these domes is contaminated. Impurities seen at the surface are clues to the internal composition of the Jovian moon, telling of a salty ice shell," he said.

"The surface of Europa is constantly being blasted by radiation from Jupiter, which likely precludes any life on the moon's surface," said Barr. "But a spacecraft might be able to detect signs of microbes just under the surface."

Both Pappalardo and Barr also are affiliated with CU-Boulder's Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics. The project was funded by NASA's Exobiology Program and Graduate Student Research Program.

Pappalardo recently served on a National Research Council panel that reaffirmed a spacecraft should be launched in the coming decade with the goal of orbiting Europa. He currently is part of a NASA team developing goals for the Jupiter Icy Moons Orbiter mission.

The scientific objectives of the mission probably will include confirming the presence of an ocean at Europa, remotely measuring the composition of the surface and scouting out potential landing sites for a follow-on lander mission.

Related Links
University Of Colorado, At Boulder
SpaceDaily
Search SpaceDaily
Subscribe To SpaceDaily Express

A Jovian Load Of New Moons
Waterloo - Jun 04, 2003
So far this year, Jupiter has gained 21 new distant satellites, with the most recent announcement of satellite S/2003 J 21 on June 3rd at the annual Canadian Astronomical Society (CASCA) meeting in Waterloo (ON). This puts Jupiter far ahead of the all other planets, with 61 known moons.







  • US Warned Not To Ignore Chinese Military Advances

  • The Indo-Israel Phalcon Radar System Deal: Pakistan's Likely Response
  • Raytheon To Replace Russian Plutonium Reactors With Coal Fired Plants
  • Titan Wins $300 Million Defense Threat Reduction Agency Contract
  • Northrop Grumman's ICBM Program Achieves CMMI Level 3 For Systems Engineering

  • Northrop Grumman Buys Completes Buyout Of Xontech To Boost Missile Defense Offerings
  • 18th Aegis Guided Missile Destroyer Ready To Be Commissioned
  • Iraq To Destroy Four Missiles Saturday
  • Northrop Grumman Marks Five Years As ICBM Prime

  • Northrop Grumman Targets Missile Defense Countermeasures Program
  • Missile Defense Strategy Not Feasible Warns American Physical Society Study
  • Lockheed Gets $67 Million Contract For MK 41 Vertical Launching System
  • EADS Wins Development Share Of UK Missile Air Defense Project

  • Wright Flyer Takes To The Sky In Las Vegas
  • Aurora Builds Low-speed Wind Tunnel
  • Yeager To Retire From Military Flying After October Airshow
  • Yeager To Retire From Military Flying After October Airshow

  • Precision Munition Achieves Perfect Score In Army UAV Tests
  • Fire Scout Gets Airborne With Raytheon's Tactical Software
  • Global Hawk Receives First Certificate To Fly UAV In US National Airspace
  • Global Hawk Honored By USAF Museum





  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement