2 Comments

  1. Science_News on

    >Planetary astronomer Bonnie Buratti remembers exactly where she was the first time she heard that Jupiter’s icy moon Europa might host life.

    >It was the 1980s, and Buratti was a graduate student at Cornell University studying images of the planet’s moons taken during the Voyager 1 and 2 flybys in 1979. Even in those first low-resolution snapshots, Europa was intriguing.

    >“It looked like a cracked egg,” she says.

    >Those cracks — in a snow-covered, icy shell — were probably filled with material that had welled up from below, Buratti and colleagues had shown. That meant there had to be something underneath the ice.

    >Buratti recalls fellow grad student Steven Squyres giving a talk about the possibility that Europa’s ice hid a salty liquid ocean. “He said, ‘Well, there’s an ocean underneath, and where there’s water, there’s life,’” she recalls. “And people laughed at him.”

    >They’re not laughing anymore.

    [Read more here.](https://www.sciencenews.org/article/buratti-nasa-europa-mission)

  2. Theonlyrational on

    I truly do not understand the amount of attention and money thrown at Europa. We’ve got the secrets of the universe being discovered by JWST and yet we spend billions of dollars on Jupiter’s tiniest moon for some reason. I would love for someone to explain why that money wouldn’t be better spent on projects like JWST.

Leave A Reply