-
Kenya's economy faces climate change risks: World Bank
-
More Nepalis drive electric, evading global fuel shocks
-
Latecomer Japan eyes slice of rising global defence spending
-
German fertiliser makers and farmers struggle with Iran war fallout
-
OPEC+ to make first post-UAE production decision
-
Massive crowds fill Rio's Copacabana beach for Shakira concert
-
US airlines step up as Spirit winds down
-
Aviation companies step up as Spirit winds down
-
'Bookless bookstore': audio-only book shop opens in New York
-
Venezuelan protesters call government wage hike a joke
-
S&P 500, Nasdaq end at fresh records on tech earnings strength
-
Pope names former undocumented migrant as US bishop of West Virginia
-
Trump says will raise US tariffs on EU cars to 25%
-
ExxonMobil CEO sees chance of higher oil prices as earnings dip
-
After Madonna and Lady Gaga, Shakira set for Rio beach mega-gig
-
King Charles gets warm welcome in Bermuda after whirlwind US visit
-
Coe hails IOC gender testing decision
-
Baguettes take centre stage on France's Labour Day
-
Iran offers new proposal amid stalled US peace talks
-
French hub monitors Hormuz tensions from afar
-
Oil steady after wild swing, stocks diverge in thin trading
-
Chinese swimmer Sun Yang reports cyberbullying to police
-
Iran activates air defences as Trump faces congressional deadline
-
India's cows offer biogas alternative to Mideast energy crunch
-
Crude edges up after wild swing, stocks track Wall St rally
-
Formerra Appoints Matt Borowiec as Chief Commercial Officer
-
New Princess Diana documentary promises her own words
-
Oil slumps after hitting peak, US indices reach new records
-
Venezuela leader hikes minimum wage package by 26%
-
Apple earnings beat forecasts on iPhone 17 demand
-
Bangladesh signs biggest-ever plane deal for 14 Boeings
-
Musk grilled on AI profits at OpenAI trial
-
Venezuela opens arms to world with Miami-Caracas flight
-
US Congress votes to end record government shutdown
-
First direct US-Venezuela flight in years arrives in Caracas
-
Just telling nations to quit fossil fuels 'not realistic': COP31 chief
-
Trump hails 'greatest king' Charles as state visit wraps up
-
Drivers help study road-trip mystery: what became of bug splats?
-
Oil strikes 4-year peak, stocks rise
-
Iran's supreme leader defies US blockade as oil prices soar
-
White House against Anthropic expanding Mythos model access: report
-
Oil crisis fuels calls to speed up clean energy transition
-
European rocket blasts off with Amazon internet satellites
-
Nigerian airlines avert shutdown as Mideast war hikes fuel prices
-
ArcelorMittal boosts sales but profits squeezed
-
German growth beats forecast but energy shock looms
-
Air France-KLM trims 2026 outlook over Middle East war impact
-
Oil surges 7% to top $126 on Trump blockade warning
-
Volkswagen warns of more cost cuts as profits plunge
-
Rolls-Royce confident on profits despite Mideast war disruption
Water on Jupiter's moon closer to surface than thought: study
Ridges that criss-cross the icy surface of Jupiter's moon Europa indicate there are shallow pockets of water beneath, boosting hopes in the search for extra-terrestrial life, scientists said Tuesday.
Europa has long been a candidate for finding life in our solar system due to its vast ocean, which is widely thought to contain liquid water -- a key ingredient for life.
There is a problem: the ocean is predicted to be buried 25-30 kilometres (15-17 miles) beneath the moon's icy shell.
However water could be closer to the surface than previously thought, according to new research published in the journal Nature Communications.
The finding came partly by chance, when geophysicists studying an ice sheet in Greenland watched a presentation about Europa and spotted a feature they recognised.
"We were working on something totally different related to climate change and its impact on the surface of Greenland when we saw these tiny double ridges," said the study's senior author Dustin Schroeder, a geophysics professor at Stanford University.
They realised that the M-shaped icy crests on Greenland looked like smaller versions of double ridges on Europa, which are the most common feature on the moon.
Europa's double ridges were first photographed by NASA's Galileo spacecraft in the 1990s, but little was known about how they were formed.
The scientists used ice-penetrating radar to observe that Greenland's ridges were formed when water pockets around 30 metres (100 feet) below the ice sheet's surface refroze and fractured.
"This is particularly exciting, because scientists have been studying double ridges on Europa for more than 20 years and have not yet come to a definitive answer for how double ridges form," said lead study author Riley Culberg, an electrical engineering PhD student at Stanford.
"This was the first time that we were able to watch something similar happen on Earth and actually observe the subsurface processes that led to the formation of the ridges," he told AFP.
"If Europa's double ridges also form in this way, it suggests that shallow water pockets must have been (or maybe still are) extremely common."
- 'Life has a shot' -
Europa's water pockets could be buried five kilometres beneath the moon’s ice shell -- but that would still be much easier to access than the far deeper ocean.
"Particularly if such water pockets form because ocean water was forced up through fractures into the ice shell, then it's possible that they would preserve evidence of any life in the ocean itself," Culberg said.
Water closer to the surface would also contain "interesting chemicals" from space and other moons, increasing the "possibility that life has a shot," Schroeder said in a statement.
We may not have too long to wait to find out more.
NASA's Europa Clipper mission, scheduled to launch in 2024 and arrive in 2030, will have ice-penetrating radar equipment similar to that used by the scientists studying Greenland's double ridges.
The spacecraft is unlikely to find definitive proof of life because it will not land on Europa, instead flying by and analysing it.
But hopes remain high. The moon's ocean is predicted to have more water than all of Earth's seas combined, according to the Europa Clipper's website.
"If there is life in Europa, it almost certainly was completely independent from the origin of life on Earth... that would mean the origin of life must be pretty easy throughout the galaxy and beyond," project scientist Robert Pappalardo said on the website.
P.Gonzales--CPN