Saturn Moon May Have Ocean of Water?

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PASADENA, Calif. - Scientists say they have found the best evidence yet that an ocean of liquid water may be hidden below the surface of Saturn's giant moon Titan.

If the results are confirmed, it would be a starting point for further study into whether the ocean could be capable of supporting life.

The latest evidence of an underground ocean is indirect and is based on analyzing radar images and Titan's spin rates from observations by the international Cassini spacecraft from 2004 to 2007.

Scientists found several dunes, channels, lakes and other geological features on Titan's surface drifted from a fixed point, likely as a result of an increase of the moon's rotation.

Using modeling techniques, scientists determined that winds in Titan's atmosphere exert a torque on the lunar surface and concluded there must be a liquid ocean below. Such a large shift would not be seen if the interior was a solid core, they said.

"Only because the crust is thin and decoupled from the deep interior by this ocean is the wind able to move the crust around as much as we see," lead author Ralph Lorenz of the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory said in an e-mail to The Associated Press.

The findings were described in Thursday's issue of the journal Science.

If an internal ocean exists on Titan, it would likely be buried below 62 miles of ice and made of water and traces of ammonia, Lorenz said.

In an accompanying editorial, Christophe Sotin of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena and Gabriel Tobie of the University of Nantes in France wrote that further observations are needed to test for the existence of an underground ocean.

"If the interpretation that Titan has an internal ocean is supported by other measurements, then Titan is a place where organics are produced and where liquid water is present," they wrote.

The presence of an underground ocean could help explain how Titan replenishes methane in its smoggy atmosphere.

Titan is one of the few objects in the outer solar system with a significant atmosphere, and scientists have long puzzled over the source of its methane. They have theorized that methane is locked in the ice covering and released through processes involving an ocean below.

The Cassini probe, a project of NASA and international partners, previously found evidence of hydrocarbon seas on Titan's surface.
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080320/ap_on_sc/saturn_titan;_ylt=AtriI8UbmAqY4keEJaELNIes0NUE
 
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Sounds interesting. But i guess this is all just speculation untill they actually send a drill up there and see first person.

Anyhow my thougths are that well find life on mares before we do on titan ^^
 
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I thought titan had oceans of methane due to the extremely low temperatures?
If it has a warm core, there could be water underground in liquid form but its probably way too deep below the surface to be of any use for us.
 
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Who said anything about mining the moon for extra water? My understanding of Titan's focus in the scientific community was that they see it as the most likely known place outside Earth to find alien lifeforms.

Too bad their last probe failed comically...They expected it to land "crunch", or land "splash"...but hadn't prepared for "squish" in the Titanian mud...
 
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I thought titan had oceans of methane due to the extremely low temperatures?
Nah there isn't much methane on Titan. Certainly not enough to pool into oceans worth.

Titan also doesn't have a warm core in the same manner as the Earth. The heat at the center is all generated by tension and friction as the moon is warped by the gravity of Saturn.
 

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Who said anything about mining the moon for extra water? My understanding of Titan's focus in the scientific community was that they see it as the most likely known place outside Earth to find alien lifeforms.
Too bad their last probe failed comically...They expected it to land "crunch", or land "splash"...but hadn't prepared for "squish" in the Titanian mud...
No. It was to see if there are planets/masses other than Earth that could or could have supported life.
 

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