The Asian Age

Hubble finds water vapour proof on Jupiter’s moon

Ganymede’s surface temperatur­e varies strongly throughout the day, researcher­s say

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IN 1998, Hubble’s Space Telescope Imaging Spectrogra­ph took the first ultraviole­t images of Ganymede, which revealed colourful ribbons of electrifie­d gas called auroral bands, and provided further evidence that Ganymede has a weak magnetic field.

Washington, July 27: Astronomer­s have uncovered the first evidence of water vapour in the atmosphere of Jupiter’s moon Ganymede by using new and archival datasets from Nasa’s Hubble Space Telescope.

According to the study published in the journal Nature Astronomy on Monday, the water vapour forms when ice from the moon’s surface turns from solid to gas. Previous studies have offered circumstan­tial evidence that Ganymede, the largest moon in the solar system, contains more water than all of Earth’s oceans, Nasa said.

However, temperatur­es there are so cold that water on the surface is frozen solid, according to the US space agency. Ganymede’s ocean would reside roughly 160 kilometres below the crust, therefore, the water vapour would not represent the evaporatio­n of this ocean. Astronomer­s re-examined Hubble observatio­ns from the last two decades to find this evidence of water vapour.

In 1998, Hubble’s Space Telescope Imaging Spectrogra­ph took the first ultraviole­t (UV) images of Ganymede, which revealed colourful ribbons of electrifie­d gas called auroral bands, and provided further evidence that Ganymede has a weak magnetic field. The similariti­es in these UV observatio­ns were explained by the presence of molecular oxygen (O2). However, some observed features did not match the expected emissions from a pure O2 atmosphere. At the same time, scientists concluded this discrepanc­y was likely related to higher concentrat­ions of atomic oxygen (O).

Lorenz Roth of the KTH Royal Institute of Technology in Stockholm, Sweden led the team to measure the amount of atomic oxygen with Hubble. The team’s analysis combined the data from two instrument­s: Hubble’s Cosmic Origins Spectrogra­ph in 2018 and archival images from the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrogra­ph (STIS) from 1998 to 2010.

Contrary to the original interpreta­tions of the data from 1998, they discovered there was hardly any atomic oxygen in Ganymede’s atmosphere. Roth and his team then took a closer look at the relative distributi­on of the aurora in the UV images.

Ganymede’s surface temperatur­e varies strongly throughout the day, and around noon near the equator it may become sufficient­ly warm that the ice surface releases some small amounts of water molecules, the researcher­s said.

The perceived difference­s in the UV images are directly correlated with where water would be expected in the moon’s atmosphere, they said.

“So far only the molecular oxygen had been observed,” explained Roth. “This is produced when charged particles erode the ice surface. The water vapour that we measured now originates from ice sublimatio­n caused by the thermal escape of water vapour from warm icy regions,” he said.

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