Mashable 02月20日
Old NASA mission reveals an unlikely world harbors an ocean
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一项新研究表明,木星的卫星木卫四可能在其冰壳下存在一个数英里深的海洋,其大小与水星相仿。早在1990年代,NASA的伽利略号飞船就发现木卫四对木星变化的磁场有反应,科学家推测其深处可能存在液态海洋。尽管此前有离子层干扰,但最新研究通过分析伽利略号的旧数据,发现仅靠离子层无法解释磁反应,而加入地下海洋的因素后,数据更加合理。未来的探测任务,如NASA的欧罗巴快船和欧空局的木星冰月探测器,有望最终确认木卫四是否存在液态水,以及是否可能存在生命。

🌊木卫四(Callisto)是木星的卫星,其大小与水星相仿,一项新研究表明,它可能在其冰壳下存在一个数英里深的海洋。这一发现增加了太阳系中存在水世界的可能性。

🛰️NASA的伽利略号飞船在1990年代发现木卫四对木星变化的磁场有反应,暗示其深处可能存在咸水海洋,因为咸水可以导电。尽管存在离子层的干扰,但科学家们现在比以往任何时候都更加乐观地认为木卫四是一个水世界。

🔬科学家团队重新分析了伽利略号任务的旧数据,并使用先进的计算机模型和统计技术。他们发现,木卫四的离子层无法单独解释其磁反应,而当他们将地下海洋考虑在内时,数据变得更有意义,这项研究发表在《AGU Advances》杂志上,有助于证实海洋理论。

🚀未来的探测任务,如NASA的欧罗巴快船(Europa Clipper)和欧洲航天局的木星冰月探测器(JUICE),以及中国计划的天问四号任务,可能会对木卫四进行观测,以确认其是否存在液态水。

A moon of Jupiter about the size of Mercury likely has a several-miles-deep ocean under its icy shell, according to a new study. 

This Jovian moon, Callisto, is the outermost of 95 circling the gas giant planet. Back in the 1990s, NASA's Galileo spacecraft discovered something strange about it: The moon seemed to react to Jupiter’s changing magnetic field. Knowing that saltwater can conduct electricity, scientists suspected the world might have a layer of liquid ocean deep down. 

But it wasn't an open-and-shut case. Callisto also seemed to have an ionosphere, a layer of electrically charged particles high in its atmosphere. That meant scientists couldn't rule out the possibility it was the ionosphere — not a subsurface ocean — causing the magnetic reactions. 

Now researchers are more optimistic than ever that Callisto is among the pantheon of water worlds in the solar system. And where there's water, there's the chance for life as we know it. 

From left, moons Ganymede, Callisto, and Io are seen orbiting Jupiter in a Hubble Space Telescope image. Credit: NASA / ESA / Hubble Heritage Team (STScI / AURA)

Callisto, the third largest moon in the entire solar system, orbits Jupiter from about 1.2 million miles away. The rocky world, discovered in 1610 by Italian Renaissance man Galileo Galilei, has earned a reputation as the most heavily cratered moon in our solar system.

The new evidence regarding Callisto comes from a somewhat surprising place: old data. NASA's Galileo mission, which launched into space in 1989, was designed to study Jupiter, its moons, and its surrounding invisible magnetic bubble, called the magnetosphere. The spacecraft had 35 encounters with Jupiter's major moons, including eight with Callisto, before the mission ended in 2003. 

Recently, a team of scientists took another look at Galileo's data, using advanced computer models and statistical techniques. Unlike prior studies, the team analyzed all the magnetic measurements from the close flybys of Callisto. Their findings revealed that Callisto’s ionosphere alone could not explain the magnetic reactions — and when they factored in an underground ocean, the data made more sense. The research, published in the journal AGU Advances, helps substantiate the ocean theory. 

The team predicts the ocean is locked beneath a solid ice shell that could be tens to hundreds of miles thick. The flowing water likely wraps around a solid rocky core. If true, that would make Callisto a close sibling to Europa, another moon of Jupiter.

Though the existence of an ocean remains inconclusive, future spacecraft measurements should be able to confirm once and for all whether Callisto is hiding liquid water. NASA's Europa Clipper and the European Space Agency's JUICE, a wonky acronym for Jupiter Icy Moons Explorer, are expected to capture data when they make flybys. China's planned Tianwen-4 mission may also observe Callisto.

After a successful October 2024 launch, Europa Clipper has been hurtling through space. It's on schedule to make its first flyby of Mars on Feb. 27, where it will get a gravity assist to continue its journey. The craft won't arrive at Europa until 2030. JUICE, which launched in 2023, will have a Venus flyby this August. The spacecraft isn't expected to reach Jupiter to begin its science mission until 2031. 

Whether the moon could harbor life is unknown, but it's "on the list" of possible places NASA would like to look. Not only does it probably have a salty ocean, but a layer of rocks more than 150 miles beneath the surface. Both are key conditions known for leading to life on Earth. Oxygen and hydrogen have also been detected in Callisto's extremely thin atmosphere. 

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木卫四 地下海洋 伽利略号 木星
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