Jupiter moon may have huge, jagged ice blades that complicate the search for alien life

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Exploring the tropics of Jupiter’s ocean moon Europa would be no walk on the beach.

Equatorial regions of the potentially life-supporting Europa, which harbors a huge ocean of salty liquid water beneath its icy shell, are probably studded with blades of ice up to 50 feet (15 meters) tall, a new study suggests.

This finding should be of interest to NASA, which is developing a lander mission that will hunt for signs of life on the 1,900-mile-wide (3,100 kilometers) satellite. [Photos: Europa, Mysterious Icy Moon of Jupiter]

“Clearly, the paper suggests very strongly that the tropics of Europa are going to be spiky, and it would be unwise to plan to land there without a specially adapted lander,” study lead author Dan Hobley, a lecturer in the School of Earth and Ocean Sciences at Cardiff University in Wales, told Space.com via email. “It would probably be safer to land further away from the equator!”

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Here on Earth, exceptionally cold and dry conditions, such as those found in the Chilean Andes, can give rise to rows of jagged ice towers called “penitentes” (Spanish for “penitent,” so named because they often look like people kneeling in penance).

The driving force behind penitente formation is sublimation, the transition of a material directly from solid to gas form. An initially smooth snowpack sublimates at different rates in different spots, causing small pits to form in some places. Sunlight bounces around in these pits, boosting sublimation further in the depths and eventually creating fields of spiky ice towers.

Blade-like ice towers called penitentes occur on Earth in some high, dry and cold tropical regions -- especially the Chilean Andes, as seen here.
Blade-like ice towers called penitentes occur on Earth in some high, dry and cold tropical regions — especially the Chilean Andes, as seen here.ESO

There’s no reason to believe this process is restricted to our planet. Indeed, scientists think the “bladed terrain” spotted on Pluto by NASA’s New Horizons spacecraft likely consists of penitentes carved into methane ice.

Europa would seem to a good bet for penitente gardens as well; after all, it’s a cold, dry, virtually air-free world that’s entirely covered in ice. So Hobley and his colleagues calculated sublimation rates around the surface of the Jupiter moon and then compared those with the rates of other erosional processes. Those processes include bombardment by meteoroids and charged particles from Jupiter’s powerful radiation belts.

The researchers found sublimation to be the dominant factor on equatorial Europa, the regions within 23 degrees of the moon’s equator. And sublimation has likely carved penitentes into the ice there, the study team determined.