Mike70
27-Mar-2008, 02:49 AM
to enceladus and it is damn riveting news indeed. turns out that some data was indeed returned by the instrument intended to sample what is coming from the water/ice geysers on enceladus. turns out that mixed in with the ice is a huge amount of organic chemicals, some in concentrations 20 times higher than expected.
the moon is also hot in some places, very hot. turns out that the "tiger stripe" fractures in the southern hemisphere where the water/ice is coming from are a full 93 deg C (almost 200 deg F) hotter than the rest of the moon.
so it appears that there is a warm liquid water enviroment on enceladus that has lots of organic chemicals mixed in with it.
here is an infrared image of the tiger stripe areas (converted to a visible heat pattern)
http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/multimedia/images/moons/images/IMG003013-br500.jpg
and here is a link to the entire article:
http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/news/press-release-details.cfm?newsID=827
the moon is also hot in some places, very hot. turns out that the "tiger stripe" fractures in the southern hemisphere where the water/ice is coming from are a full 93 deg C (almost 200 deg F) hotter than the rest of the moon.
so it appears that there is a warm liquid water enviroment on enceladus that has lots of organic chemicals mixed in with it.
here is an infrared image of the tiger stripe areas (converted to a visible heat pattern)
http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/multimedia/images/moons/images/IMG003013-br500.jpg
and here is a link to the entire article:
http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/news/press-release-details.cfm?newsID=827