Friday, December 13, 2013

The Search For Life On Europa Could Center On Celestial Party-Crashers

The Search For Life On Europa Could Center On Celestial Party-Crashers:
Jupiter's moon, Europa, appears to have clay-like minerals on it (visible in blue in the false-color patch, amid red-colored water ice). The information came from new data analysis from NASA's Galileo mission, which concluded in 2003. The backdrop is a mosaic of visual-light images from Galileo's Near-Infrared Mapping Spectrometer. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/SETI
The Search For Life On Europa Could Center On Celestial Party-Crashers
Jupiter’s moon, Europa, appears to have clay-like minerals on it (visible in blue in the false-color patch, amid red-colored water ice). The information came from new data analysis from NASA’s Galileo mission, which concluded in 2003. The backdrop is a mosaic of visual-light images from Galileo’s Near-Infrared Mapping Spectrometer. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/SETI
The cool thing about space missions is long after they conclude, the data can yield the most interesting information. Here’s an example: Jupiter’s moon Europa may have a ripe spot for organic materials to take root.
Scouring the data from NASA’s past Galileo mission — which ended a decade ago — scientists unveiled an area with “clay-like minerals” on it that came to be after an asteroid or comet smashed into the surface. The connection? These celestial party-crashers often carry organics with them.
(...)
Read the rest of The Search For Life On Europa Could Center On Celestial Party-Crashers (429 words)

© Elizabeth Howell for Universe Today, 2013. |Permalink |No comment |
Post tags: , , ,

Feed enhanced by Better Feed from Ozh

No comments:

Post a Comment