Space.com on MSN
Jupiter's moon Europa has an ice shell about 18 miles thick — and that could be bad news for alien life
Using data gathered by NASA's Juno Jupiter orbiter, scientists estimate that Europa's ice shell is about 18 miles thick — which could make it hard for nutrients to get down to its buried ocean.
Morning Overview on MSN
Beneath Pluto’s frozen crust lurks something far weirder than ice
Pluto’s frozen face looks dead at first glance, but its most famous feature hints at something far stranger than a simple ice ...
Scientists with expertise in geophysics at Washington State University have developed an alternative pathway for the ...
NASA’s Juno mission, led by an SwRI scientist, recently provided the first resolved subsurface measurements of the ice-encased Jovian moon Europa. This cutaway illustration shows an 18-mile-thick ...
How thick is the ice shell on Jupiter’s moon, Europa? This is what a recent study published in Nature Astronomy hopes to address as a team of scientists revealed groundbreaking insights into Europa’s ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results