Liquid Ocean on Europa? 117
Ryan Finnin Day writes "A team from University of Arizona proposes an explanation for the arcs visible on the surface of Europa: a liquid sea with 98 foot tidal swells cracking the frozen surface. Also in the story, plans for a NASA probe in 2008 to use a laser altimeter to detect tidal swells. Read all about it."
Re:Christian Science (Score:2)
As to Europa, I also saw the Discovery show on the probe. I guess I never realized how likely life was there ( I thought it was frozen solid ), and I didn't know that there's actually a plan to send a probe. With the geothermal vents, I think the likelihood of life there is high. To think that in thirty years or less, we could be there checking for life really got me excited. That would be one of the discoveries of the epoch. God, I get excited just thinking about it.
Plus, just think if it's advanced past the microbial stage!
Oops, gotta go to the bathroom now; just made a mess.
Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic. - Arthur C. Clarke
(we could be gods!)
Re:The 'Christian Science Monitor' ??? (Score:1)
Re:Radiation Environment? (Score:1)
The point is that even though most organisms avoid such a conditon, others can thrive on it and many can learn to live with it. Life can carry on.
What are the fundamentals of life, as we understand them to be? Water. Carbon. An energy source. That seems to be it. We don't know nearly enough to say what *can't* work -- if deep sea archea can breathe sulfur and Russian mice can learn to live with nuclear meltdown, anything might be possible.
Re:Radiation Environment? (Score:2)
Could life evolve or take root (transported from Earth on tektites) in the leads of Europa given the extant conditions?
As far as life developing there... we don't know what forms are possible for life. We know OUR form of life would have a problem with the radiation, but that doesn't mean that any life would have those same problems. Perhaps a different form of life could have developed that actually somehow harnessed the radiation for energy, in some sort of "radiosynthesis". Maybe far-fetched, but there are bacteria here on Earth that can survive just about any radiation you throw at them. And that's just a modification in our structure of life.
I see way too much of that when people talk about life developing beyond Earth. They're too quick to project what is true about our life on any other possibilities.
Personally, I'd love to see a form of life that thought a planet like Venus was paradise and that Earth was uninhabitable.
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Bacterial Lifespan (Score:1)
Not true, some bacteria can enter a spore state, and remain in suspended animation indefinately. They've found some frozen in polar ice caps for 3 million years, that came back to a normal life cycle when put in liquid water.
Cheers,
Rick Kirkland
Re:Radiation Environment? (Score:1)
Re:Woohoo! (Score:1)
Re:Christian Scientists eh... (Score:1)
Re:You might want to check these out... (Score:1)
Re:Christian Scientists eh... (Score:1)
Are you a member of the Flat-Earth Society?
No, they are only implying no photosynthesis (Score:1)
The little beasties around the black spouters make incredibly efficient use of the heat energy they get. But as life goes, there just isn't a whole lot of room for variety.
The latest SciAm article on the oceans of europa (which didn't mention this cool discovery) also talked about the limitations of chemosynthesis.
Still, the life found on earth around these undersea vents is pretty impressive for what it's got to work with.
http://www.amnho nline.org/expeditions/blacksmokers/life_forms.htm
Page that talks about black smokers.
I must be tired too... (Europa != Europe) (Score:1)
I didn't understand this at all, until I read the article and found out that they didn't talk about my part of the world, but rather an object in space with a very similar name.
FYI, "Europe" is spelled "Europa" in Swedish (and a few other languages too).
It was the Chinese. (Score:1)
Anyway, that's according to "2061" but, as has been observed, the details of previous odyssey books have not always been treated as canon by the sequels. Rather, each book exists in its own parallel, but not identical, universe.
Health News in CSM (Score:1)
Re:It was the Chinese. (Score:1)
I don't think the shark-like creature actually did any leaping until its death throes, but you're right about that. I've been working under the assumption that the corpse may have been fatal to the creature because of a handedness difference in the arrangement of its proteins. A number of the proteins that we use in our own bodies (I'm working under the assumption that ours are right handed, but I may have it backwards, IANAMB [I Am Not A Molecular Biologist]) are poison to us in their left-handed form. Or, it could have been a number of different things about the different biochemistries that killed it, right down to the oxygen in the air inside the bodies lungs (Europa didn't have much in the way of free oxygen, so all the life used some sort of anaerobic respiration, although it seemed to be a bit more efficient than the anaerobic processes used by earth life).
PS, can you tell that I've got my copy open right in front of me?
Oh yeah. (Score:1)
So, that's all I meant by it.
Re:Titan's liquid seas (Score:1)
Re:life imitates art? (Score:1)
Jeez...
Imagine the Surf (Score:1)
Re:Crunch-splash! (Score:2)
I think it is commonly accepted among most scientists that somewhere under the Europa ice caps is liquid water. How deep and how much water may be under dispute. The ice crust is very active, and breaking apart and moving about, which is really strong evidence for liquid H2O. Assuming there is an ocean, the probe must first get through this ice layer. Several ideas have been studied, such as drilling through, melting through (either electrically or with RTG), even slamming into the ice with high speed with intents to blast/melt through parts of it. It is not even known how thick the ice is, it could be hundreds of feet, or could be several km. That requires alot of energy to get past!
Then comes the question of having the probe transmit data back to earth. Does a surface relay remain on the surface to beam info back to earth, while the 'hydrobot' goes under the water? if so, how does the bot communicate with the surface station? Does it keep a tether, or use sonic modem to echo sonar through the ice, or some other method? If a tether is used, it could be potentially several km long!
Even if the probe magically makes it into the ocean, what instruments does it carry, and what measurements does it make? An underwater camera would require light, thus floodlights would be needed. Should sonar be used to map out the ocean bottom and/or the ice crust on top? All of these require power, which is a very limited resource on a space probe like this. Also, all of these require mass, which is a very limiting factor in both getting the payload into Earth and ultimately Europa orbit.
An perhaps the most critical requirement for uch a probe is in line with Star Trek's Prime Directive. Scientists want to make very sure they don't do anything to contaminate or disturb any native biosphere Europa has. Thus, RTG's are questionable. Even drilling through the ice can be a problem.
Scientists everywhere would love to send such a probe, however its plan of attack at Europa must be very meticuously (sp) thought out, because of the cost/time required just to get such a payload to Europa. There are plans for a preliminary Europa explorer, to provide much more detail than Galileo has. Most importantly, estimates of the surface ice thickness, to see if an ice penetrator is even possible.
For more information, check out the following URL which has a wealth of Europa-related web sites. [klx.com]
Liquid != Water (Score:1)
Re:Speaking of Clarke (!!??) (Score:1)
Re:Woohoo! (Score:1)
Re:I could never make sense of his movie (Score:2)
Of course, the movie version shows dancing spaceships better.
Time Delays [moderately off topic] (Score:2)
Seriously, NASA (and other space agencies around the world facing serious budget restraints) are going to have to do some fancy dancing to keep "us" (in the lower common denomenator type sense) interested in their exploration projects. I notice that it won't be 7 or 8 years before the laser spectrometer can partially confirms this theory (and then probably another 7 or 8 years before the next craft to "study it further" could conceivably arrive).
15 years. That's a long time to people becoming used to psuedo-instant gratification. The MTV generation can't keep focused on more than one thing for more than 10 seconds apparently (at least, that's what I assume based on those nauseating videos I happen see, anyone else feel seasick watching these music videos now?).
Hopefully, a proliferation of stories like this will generate and expand peoples interest in innerspace exploration and travel. NASA's servers (and the other space agencies around the world of course, let's not be USA-centric here) have an incredible amount of cool info. Maybe someday American's will elect representatives who think agencies like NASA are more important than making sure everyone can have their own personal semi-automatic rifle and direct the extra funding and resources accordingly.
Just a couple thoughts, probably offtopic, so moderate accordingly.
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Re:Radiation Environment? (Score:1)
-r
Why be skeptical? (Score:1)
You have a good point about the question of how planets form. Why did Europa get all the water anyway? Or, did the other moons get plenty of water as well, but it has since boiled off into space? Interesting questions.
Amazing.. (Score:1)
Daniel
timing! (Score:1)
no, it actually says "linux"! (Score:1)
"The enigmatic, unknown extraterrestial forces which have apparently been cultivating sentient life throughout the galaxy for aeons abruptly reversed their stance on the Europa project yesterday and embraced the Open Source philosophy.
Formerly Europa had been totally propeitary, and the only statement released by the extraterrestrial forces was "ALL THESE WORLDS ARE YOURS. EXCEPT EUROPA. ATTEMPT NO LANDINGS THERE." However the extraterrestrials are now planning to release under the GNU public liscence the full genomes of all life that develops on Europa, and are inviting other sentient beings to help in the creation.
There is no word yet as to whether they may be considering open-sourcing the DNA sequences used by life on earth. In the absense of publicly available source, some humans have turned to attempting to reverse-engineer the DNA sequences under the banner "WINE^H^H^H^HThe Human Genome Project".
The extraterrestrial announcement may help to explain the incident last month in which Linus Tourevalds, RMS, and several other experienced programmers were inexplicably turned into radiation-based life forms by a large black monolith which mysteriously appeared at LinuxExpo in what appears to have been some kind of recruitment drive.
[snip]
Since the life on europa is still carbon-based, it is believed that porting of the Linux kernel will be relatively easy. Judging from a strange and slightly cryptic message (apparently from Linus) that mysteriously flashed across all of slashdot.org's monitors shortly after the extraterrestrial announcement as some strange force briefly seized control of all the computers in the building, work is preceeding very well; while right now they are concentrating on a port of GCC, it is possible there may be penguins on Europa as early as next year.
God could not be reached for comment."
-mcc-baka
who is even more tired than you
Finnaly! (Score:1)
Who's the Boss? Tony Danza, of course!
Re:It was the Chinese. (Score:1)
Also, he seems to be talking about something slightly different. While the Chinese ship Tsien did make the first landing on Europa in 2010, another team (including Chris Floyd) was hyjacked into landing on Europa in 2061. They threw the body of the hyjacker (dead) into the ocean, and a large fish like creature leaped out of the water, and ate the body. (subsequently dieing on account of the radically different biology). Anyways, the crew sent to rescue that team (which included Heywood Floyd) was made up primarilly of Russians, as I recall. (Having just completed a landing on Halley's comet)
Well, i've had my fun for the evening!
Re:Bacterial Lifespan (Score:1)
I have just two things to add to this:
Re:Time Delays [moderately off topic] (Score:1)
I'm not sure I agree. There's a lot of advantages to doing things in space, (think of how much you could overclock you celeron if it ran in the 0.3 kelvins (is that right?) environment of empty space. :)
I think within a half a century or so, populations will be such that it will become more popular to look for other places to expand. China went through a hard time curbing their growth rate, but it's working. India, unfortunately, is going to be the site of a number of enormous human disasters for the next couple generations. So many people crowded like that are just too vulnerable to disaster.
Any, this is seriously offtopic now. :)
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Re:Christian Scientists eh... (Score:1)
Re:Time Delays [even more off topic] (Score:1)
> representatives who think agencies like NASA are
> more important than making sure everyone can
> have their own personal semi-automatic rifle and
> direct the extra funding and resources
> accordingly.
The government spends more money trying to make people *NOT* own firearms than they do protecting that fundamental tenet of the Constitution.
Now maybe if the government didn't have to spend millions of dollars looking into the abuses of power in the Executive branch, we could throw a couple tens of millions over at NASA. Not a lot, but every bit would help, eh?
Of course, government agencies tremendously overspend and NASA is no exception. The ballooning cost of the International Space Station is a prime example. Only the recent Deep Space projects have tried to reverse this problem.
Personally, I think life on Europa is kind of a geewhiz kind of thing. If there's life there, great. It doesn't do much for us though. We get the "we're not alone" thing settled or maybe not.
Wouldn't we be better off directing our resources at the crusty sphere we look at every night? You know, the moon that we abandoned twentysome years ago? It seems like the perfect stepping stone to deeper exploration. Of course, the tidal effects on the Earth of repeated lunar gravity assisted launches could be bad. Mars should be our prime target after that. Let's get the terraforming process started so if the environmental naysayers are right we have a place to go.
Hell, let's commercialize space as much as possible. It's the only way you or I are ever going to get the chance to go. Start mining some asteroids and setup a processing plant on the moon or something. Offer tours like you get at the Hoover Dam.
Deep space exploration is pretty cool. I'm a big fan of all the news that comes from it. But beyond the science of it, how does it help me? Not a whole lot, I'm sorry to say. Let's focus on some projects with achievable goals in the relatively near term.
Of course, if everyone voted Libertarian, we'd have a lot more resources to make this happen.
You're such a loser! (Score:1)
If you go back to high school and learn how to formulate an argument that doesn't have spelling mistakes, then I might consider attacking your points in an objective manner.
Re: Amazing.. (Score:1)
Re:You're such a loser! (Score:1)
Let's leave god out of it! (Score:1)
There's no need to bring an imaginary ethereal being into the discussion to justify that which simpletons have difficulty understanding!
All to often religious people fall back on the same old argument: "God designed it that way" - well I've yet to see any of your gods, and until such time that I do, we can only assume these are natural occurrences.
No one can prove the existence of any god. Stars are there and form naturally until otherwise proven - so deal with it!
Back to the topic at hand... (Score:1)
How can you claim to be involved in an intelligent discussion when a primary-school child could spell better than you?
Haven't you heard of spell checkers?
Re:Back to the topic at hand... (Score:1)
2. intelligence and spelling are not the same
3. if i can't spell a word i try to spell it phonetically (i had to look that one up) and a person of average intelligence SHOULD be able to decipher what i'm saying my sounding it out, you know that skill you learned in grade school.
4. please make a substantial argument, not a whine about my style... you're lucky that this is typed instead written, then you might have a point about readability do to my terrible handwriting and tendency to use obscure abbreviations.
waiting patiently for an email
p.s. i hope your happy with my spelling this time
Re:Back to the topic at hand... (Score:1)
sorry
Re:Ahem (Clarke) (Score:1)
Re:Let's leave god out of it! (Score:1)
btw your point doesn't answer my point, i said that the tolerances for start to be able to exist are tiny, go outside them and they couldn't exist in the form they are now. if you could show wm "squillions" of universes with different physical constants and life, that would be a point.
i never said they don't form naturally. if God set everything up right than stars, life everything would take care itself. i believe once you get past the setting up phase than everything can formm "naturally" its the setting up phase i have trouble believing occured without an outside influence
Seas? (Score:1)
Woohoo! (Score:3)
The discovery of life on mars would be great, but it's possible (nay, probable) that this life would have the same origin as life on Earth.
Europa, however, is way to far away for this to be probable. It's still finitely possible, but that's all.
And, as we all know, life probably needs water. Life as we know it certainly does.
If there is water on Europa, there may be life. If there's life on Europa, as far as I'm concerned it's ubiquitous.
Well... Circling Jupiter WOULD make large tides... (Score:1)
But what, then, is holding up the ice shell ?? Unless they're claiming that the shell moves, at least for the most part, as a unit, and only excessive stresses would cause fractures, etc...
Still, it'd be nice to put a probe in long-term orbit around Europa....
life imitates art? (Score:1)
remember when the rescue crew (were they russians?) heading for the Discovery ended up on Europa? didn't they discover that Europa's icy surface covered a liquid ocean? and didn't somethign come out of the ocean and eat their spaceship or something? (told you it's been a while.)
sort of interesting that Clarke forshadowed this so accurately, if I'm remembering right. If memory serves me, there's also a big white area with a black dot in the millde on the moon where dave bowman found the third monolith. (I believe I read that in some interview with Clarke or something.)
anyway, all very interesting.
Ahem (Clarke) (Score:3)
ALL THESE WORLDS ARE YOURS. EXCEPT EUROPA.
ATTEMPT NO LANDINGS THERE.
Hmmm... (Score:3)
On Earth, isn't it now believed that the first life was formed from "hot beds" on the ocean floors. Where magma broker through the Earth's crust and warmed the water. Obviously, absolutely no rays from the sun are able to penetrate miles down to the bottom of the ocean either.
How are they implying that this could not happen on Europa?
think about the size of the tides (Score:1)
I'm still skeptical though, of the existance of the ocean itself. But its implications on how planets form would be very interesting, in terms of the heavy body and water distribution from the accretion disk that formed jupiter and its moons.
-- Moondog
Re:Seas? (Score:2)
Laser measurement is a good way to measure the altitude of the ice very precisely, to see just how much it moves up and down.
Wow. (Score:3)
Cool.
Re:Seas? (Score:1)
This is far from new (Score:4)
Here is a link [sji.org] to a 1996 conference on this subject.
A similar story is running in Scientific American. You can see the table of contents for this month's issue here [sciam.com].
Points to Remember:
*it may not be water. Long-chain hydrocarbons have also been proposed. It could be from mineral oils to salt water, really.
*the only "new news" here is the theory proposed by these guys from the U. of Arizona that the cracks are consistent with tidal patterns. This is cool, but it is only confirming evidence for what people believed in the first place.
*Europa has strong volcanic activity, similar to its lava-covered sibling Io. This is due to Jupiter's insane gravitational pull. But Europa is colder than Io, because it's further out and has no atmosphere, so it has an icy crust. The idea is that (if it really is H20 ice) the volcanic activity has melted some of the ice. But, again, lots of stuff besides water freezes. All we know is that spectrogr aphically [msnbc.com] there is some kind of salt there.
I hope it does prove to be water, but let's not get carried away just yet.
-konstant
Crunch-splash! (Score:1)
I remember reading somewhere that there are plans to send a probe of some sort out to Europa and pierce the icy crust to see if there be any beasties beneath.
Good hunting to 'em.
Re:Ahem (Clarke) (Score:2)
Then there's the theory that life on Earth (and possibly Europa) developed first at geothermal vents deep in the Oceans... It would be so cool if we discoverd life there while Clarke is still alive. I'm sure he's hoping too.
-t
Re:life imitates art? (Score:2)
The story was changed for the movie, in which the third monolith was orbiting Jupiter. Probably to include Life on Europa in the next story. The books written after that followed the movie's storyline.
Scientific American (Score:2)
The article goes into considerable detail about the effects of torsion from Jupiter and the other moons on Europa and how this generates tidal heat that can keep the sea liquid. The icy "shell" seems to rotate faster than the moon itself, with the sea acting as a kind of bearing. The most interesting evidence for me came from analysis of the Galileo probe's telemetry: subtle perturbations in its radio signal as it moves through its orbit suggests various properties of Europa's gravitational field, which in turn reveals the density at various levels, which ultimately is being used to estimate the thickness of the probable Europan sea, etc. All from a little distortion in the telemetry. Not bad.
The article is very good, and worth going by a news stand or library to look over if you get a chance.
Re:Liquid != Water (Score:1)
You might want to check these out... (Score:1)
http://www.scifiweb.com/frames/main.html
http://www.sddt.com/files/librarywire/98/02/02/
...before you go making uninformed sweeping statements like that!
Good god I must be tired. (Score:2)
It's not "Linux Oceans on Europa" rather:
LIQIUD Oceans on Europa.
Time for a new monitor.
Re:Well... Circling Jupiter WOULD make large tides (Score:2)
Since Europa is not in a perfectly circular orbit, and since Jupiter has 3 other "tidally significant" moons (i.e. big enough to matter on a macroscopic scale) you could get some killer tides. In fact, with Jupiter, the Sun, and Ganymede, Callisto, and Io all creating separate tidal patterns, you'd have five different high tides and ebb tides each day - day being the same as an orbit, of course, since we're locked - and those tides would all reinforce and cancel eachother out. 96 foot waves would probably require all five tides in sync - but that would happen several times a year, I think.
My head hurts...
Re:Why be skeptical? (Score:1)
Europa Orbiter (Ice and Fire) (Score:2)
The mission plans to determine the thickness of Europa's Ice and determine the existence of water. There's also a link on that page about the mission being a precursor to "hydrobots", underwater submaries that would melt their way through the Europan ice to explore underneath... Very Cool.
Great, now all we have to do is... (Score:1)
Re:Ahem (Clarke) (Score:1)
Ok So what planet are you posting from?
Christian Science (Score:1)
Re:Be fair Re:The 'Christian Science Monitor' ??? (Score:1)
Re:Christian Scientists eh... (Score:1)
Anyway, using your logic, I could walk about the Grand Canyon, marvel at the many awe-inspiring vistas presented, and think, "There must be a Designer! The action of water on rock could never have produced this beauty!"
Oh, and it wouldn't matter if the entire U.S. and the rest of the world believed that the Christian God created the Universe; that doesn't make it true.
Re:Christian Scientists eh... (Score:1)
Re:Ahem (Clarke) (Score:2)
> ATTEMPT NO LANDINGS THERE.
Yeah, 'they' wanted to protect the incipient life forms so they could turn Jupiter into a star, melt Europa, destroy its ecology, and thoroughly kill the life forms they were so vigorously protecting (and probably most of the life forms on dear old boring Earth, too).
What a lame movie. But the advice is probably good: if there is life there, then we shouldn't go. Or even send a lander.
Re:Ahem (Clarke) (Score:1)
If he was refuring to the Movie there was an extra line in the message. In the book it's made clear that the Monoliths had determined that the more intelligent forms of life on Europa could stand the warmer climet. And living on land was essantual to thier development.
The 'Christian Science Monitor' ??? (Score:1)
Re:Well... Circling Jupiter WOULD make large tides (Score:3)
--
Matt Singerman
Ehrmm... (Score:2)
I can't cite anything off of the top of my head, but has anyone else read Clarke's 2069? The Europan ocean features prominently in that story.
Ok, I did a quick search on altavista. Here's what I came up with. I'm sure that you can find more if you're curious.
--
A host is a host from coast to coast...
In the latest Scientific American (Score:2)
Unfortunately, you can't read current articles on-line. Subscribe! It's a great mag.
One of the interesting bits in the article was that the Russian Vostok [wunderground.com] [2 [slashdot.org]] outpost in Antartica [flex.net] is right on top of an under-the-ice lake [nasa.gov], al-la Europa. They are going to field-test the Europa explorer equipment on it -- satellites and robots. Two robots are proposed; a "cryobot: and "hydrobot". The cryobot would look at the ice and melt a hole down into the water. The hydrobot would look at the water.
There's also an article at Nasa [nasa.gov] about life on Europa.
Re:Wow. (Score:2)
True, Io is much nearer to Jupiter (and thus subject to a more severe gravity gradient), you have to balace that out against Io's tiny size. A small planet has a much greater ratio of surface-area-to volume. Io loses heat very rapidly compared to its bigger neighbors. Even so, the tidal forces are enough to melt rock and create volcanoes.
To determine if Europa might have hot springs/ volcanoes/black smokers/etc, you'd need to figger out how much energy Europa absorbs in the form of tidal forces and balance it against how much energy it takes to keep an ocean of unkown volume liquid. It's a lot of unknowns. A probe in orbit around Europa would truly kick ass.
Re:I could never make sense of his movie (Score:2)
Re:In the latest Scientific American (Score:2)
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/ice_fire/europ ao.htm [nasa.gov]
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/galileo/s tatus970718.html [nasa.gov]
http://cass.jsc.nasa.gov/researc h/outerp/euro.html [nasa.gov]
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/galileo/ [nasa.gov]
recent Sagan origin theory (Score:1)
it goes on to say that by keeping the ocean liquid underneath with hydrothermal activity in combination with asteroid impacts, this could have lead to an abiogenic formation of life.
and here we see Europa with an ocean covered by a water ice crust (so it is water underneath, if at all) heated by hydrothermal vent activity, and it has undoubtedly dealt with asteroid impacts...hrmmmm....
Titan's liquid seas (Score:2)
This [nasa.gov] was also released 2 years ago (April 9, 1997)
Re:Christian Scientists eh... (Score:1)
"Christian" != "religious fanatic" for all values of "Christian." Judging people based on short, one-word labels is called 'prejudice.' It's ugly. If the name of the group were "Religious Fanatic Scientists," your point would make sense.
And, no, I'm no Christian either. But having an unthinking knee-jerk namecalling reaction to religion makes one just as much a mindless zombie as blindly following religious dogma does.
Pot and kettle, my friend....
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Re:life imitates art? (Score:1)
Fortunately, (?) there wasn't. We don't think. Hard to say. That's probably just a spot on the image.
Right?
Re:I don't think most of you realize... (Score:1)
Clarke's works are, for the most part, very impressive pieces of futurism, and will continue to be, even if it's discovered that he's a pedophile crack addict Nazi war criminal.
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Re:Time Delays [moderately off topic] (Score:1)
Far as I know, Einstein's theories are still just that -- theories. You have to actually give it (FTL travel) a go to know for sure. But what do I know...
Seriously, NASA are going to have to do some fancy dancing to keep [the common man] interested in their exploration projects.
That has always been the problem with the space science programs. People do not see an immediate benifit to going into space. There is no oil to drill for, no gold to mine, no resources to rape, no buck to be made. Or at least they think so. Pure science and abstract knowledge is all that is left, and that never sells very well to the unwashed masses.
This brief monologue from Babylon 5 is one of the best arguments I've heard for space exploration. The commander in charge of a large space station has just been asked if space exploration is a mistake...
Be fair Re:The 'Christian Science Monitor' ??? (Score:2)
I know that the Roman Catholic Church has no problem with evolution. A lot of the mellower Protestant denominations don't get ruffled about it.
I don't know how Christian Scientists feel about evolution. I do know their 'zine is highly respected for being impartial on international matters.
Well sure (Score:4)
Re:But it's not that cold on Europa! (Score:1)
The Europan oceans would be getting their heat not from what the Sun or Jupiter radiates, but from the immense gravitational forces from Jupiter and the Jovian moons. The moons may be warm internally, but *not* at the surface.
Re:Christian Science (Score:2)
Heat (Score:1)
Radiation Environment? (Score:2)
Jupiter has a simply huge magnetic field that traps cosmic rays and energetic solar wind particles for very long periods of time. This is bad enough that our space hardware has an difficult time with it, and I have heard the speculation that human beings could never visit the region of Jupiter without taking a lethal dose.
Could life evolve or take root (transported from Earth on tektites) in the leads of Europa given the extant conditions?
Speaking of Clarke (Score:1)
Not really to relevant, but 3001 is an excellent book and ties up a lot of the loose ends in the series quite nicely.
Re:Speaking of Clarke (!!??) (Score:1)
His books of late have been rather poor (3001 and the Rama series comes to mind). Disappointing, as his earlier works were *excellent*.
Unfortuntely, the same was starting to happen to Asimov before his death (see Foundation's Edge and Foundataion & Earth). They weren't *bad* but definately not up to par with his earlier works.
Re:Well... Circling Jupiter WOULD make large tides (Score:1)
We could use the excuses of 'education' and early warning system for 'meteors' 'rogue aliens' 'more extensive scientific study'.