Saturn's 'Death Star' moon Mimas may have an ocean scientists never believed could exist
By Robert Lea published 1 day ago
"The major finding is to discover habitability conditions on a solar system object which we would never, never expect to have liquid water. It's really astonishing."
An illustration shows Saturn's moon 'Death Star' moon Mimas with the gas giant and Enceladus in the background. (Image credit: NASA/Robert Lea (created with Canva))
Astronomers have discovered that a tiny moon of Saturn, named Mimas, may harbor a hidden liquid ocean beneath its thick icy shell and may thus have the conditions for habitability.
This shocking finding radically changes the definition of what an ocean moon can be, and could ultimately redefine our search for alien life on moons in the solar system. That's because, at first appearance, Mimas nicknamed the 'Death Star' because a large crater means it resembles the Empire's space station in Star Wars doesn't look like the kind of body scientists would expect to support an ocean. In fact, it doesn't even look capable of supporting such a vast body of liquid at all.
The team behind the watery discovery estimates the ocean is located around 12 to 18 miles (20 to 30 kilometers) beneath the ice crust surface of Mimas; the researchers also believe it is relatively young, having only appeared between 2 million and 25 million years ago. Yet, despite remaining hidden for millions of years, the ocean appears to comprise at least half of the moon's volume.
"The major finding here is the discovery of habitability conditions on a solar system object which we would never, never expect to have liquid water," Valery Lainey, discovery team member and a scientist at the Observatoire de Paris, told Space.com. "It's really astonishing."
More:
https://www.space.com/saturn-death-star-moon-mimas-liquid-subsurface-ocean