Breakthrough Study Pinpoints Geyser Sites on Ganymede for JUICE Exploration

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Breaking: A new study has identified specific regions on Jupiter's moon Ganymede where active water geysers are likely erupting, giving the European Space Agency's JUICE mission a clear target for its search for extraterrestrial life. The findings, released today by planetary scientists at the University of Cologne, pinpoint icy vents along the moon's equatorial perimeter that may be expelling material from its vast subsurface ocean.

"These geyser candidates are our best hope for sampling Ganymede's interior ocean without drilling," said Dr. Elena Voss, lead author of the study. "JUICE's instruments can fly through these plumes and directly analyze water chemistry for biosignatures." The spacecraft is scheduled to enter orbit around Ganymede in 2034.

Why Ganymede Matters

Ganymede is the solar system's largest moon, even bigger than Mercury. It is also the only moon known to generate its own intrinsic magnetic field, a feature that scientists believe interacts with Jupiter's powerful magnetosphere to create auroras and drive internal heating.

Breakthrough Study Pinpoints Geyser Sites on Ganymede for JUICE Exploration
Source: phys.org

Beneath its icy crust, Ganymede harbors an ocean estimated to contain more water than all of Earth's oceans combined—a key ingredient for habitability. The JUICE mission (Jupiter Icy Moons Explorer) aims to determine whether this ocean could support life.

Background: The JUICE Mission and Ganymede's Hidden Ocean

Launched in April 2023, JUICE is currently en route to the Jovian system, with arrival expected in 2031. After a flyby tour of Europa and Callisto, it will enter a permanent orbit around Ganymede—the first time a spacecraft has orbited a moon other than Earth's.

Scientists have long suspected Ganymede's ocean exists from magnetic field measurements by NASA's Galileo probe. The new study, published in Geophysical Research Letters, uses infrared and ultraviolet observations from the Hubble Space Telescope to identify ten geyser-like features that appear to be actively venting water vapor.

What This Means: A Direct Window Into Habitability

If confirmed, plumes would allow JUICE to sample ocean material without needing to land. "The geysers are essentially cosmic champagne corks popping from a hidden ocean," said Dr. Voss. "We can taste that water directly."

This shortens the timeline for assessing Ganymede's potential. Instead of drilling through kilometers of ice, JUICE's mass spectrometer and particle analyzer can capture plume particles during close flybys. The study also suggests that the geyser zones are aligned with tectonic stress lines, offering clues about how the moon's icy shell interacts with its deep ocean.

NASA's Europa Clipper, launching later this year, will perform similar plume hunting at Europa. Together, both missions may revolutionize our understanding of ocean worlds in the outer solar system.

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