Santa's workshop could be on snowy moon

Santa's workshop could be on snowy moon
Enceladus. Credit: University of Warwick

Santa's winter workshop might be in space, as University of Warwick researchers are exploring whether snowy moons over a billion kilometres away from Earth are potentially habitable.

According to Dr David Brown, and colleagues at Warwick's Centre for Exoplanets and Habitability, could be supported on moons of ice and snow with vast oceans under their frozen surfaces, orbiting Jupiter and Saturn.

One example is Enceladus - the sixth largest of Saturn, a frosty environment of perpetual winter, its surface covered in fresh ice and snow, with a noon temperature of -198 °C (-324 °F).

Although conditions seem inhospitable, researchers suggest that life could thrive there thanks to large amounts of water (which may already be home to ) underneath the icy surface, which can protect beings from harmful ultraviolet radiation and cosmic rays.

Regular mixing of the water from changes in temperature and pressure, and the potential for like the ones we see in Earth's oceans, would also encourage life to be sustained.

The snowy moons orbiting Jupiter and Saturn open up the possibility that more of the solar system is habitable than we thought - giving us more opportunities to search for alien life, and even to discover new terrestrial homes amongst the stars.

Dr David Brown commented: "Living in a never-ending landscape of snow and ice all year might not seem particularly inviting, even for Santa! But these moons represent some of the best chances for life beyond Earth in the solar system, and are environments that we're very interested in exploring.

"Looking at places like Enceladus gives us a great chance to explore the potential of these winter wonderlands for supporting life.

"We're also trying to find more examples of out there in the wider Galaxy, and it would be really exciting if we do."

In 2005, the Cassini spacecraft flew close to Enceladus and revealed details about its surface and environment in great detail - including water-rich plumes venting from the of the moon.

Citation: Santa's workshop could be on snowy moon (2017, December 19) retrieved 26 April 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2017-12-santa-workshop-snowy-moon.html
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