Killer alien jellyfish may be lurking in the water on Jupiter’s moon

Killer alien jellyfish may be lurking in the water — near Jupiter.

Experts say conditions are perfect for the fearsome floating stingers, which may be weirder and deadlier than our ones.

Scientists studying newly formed “gashes” on icy Greenland found them eerily similar to terrain on Jupiter’s moon Europa, a world which has long interested alien hunters like Toy Story’s Buzz Lightyear.

Dramatic “double ridges” around 1,000ft high and half a mile apart were first photographed across icy oceans in Europa by the Galileo spacecraft in the 1990s.

It had been a mystery how they were formed, until scientists saw it happen in north-west Greenland, when ice fractured around a pocket of pressurised water.

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As well as freaky jellyfish, Greenland is a fertile breeding land home to slugs, shrimps and snails.

And researchers say Europa — with its deep salty ocean under the ice and surrounded by chemical activity from its outer space neighbors — may be just as bountiful.

Alien life, computer artwork. Aquatic life on Jupiter's moon Europa.
Alien life, computer artwork. Aquatic life on Jupiter’s moon Europa.
Getty Images/Science Photo Libra

Professor Dustin Schroeder, of California’s University of Stanford, said: “Because it is closer to the surface — where you get interesting chemicals from space, other moons and the volcanoes of Io — there is a possibility life has a shot if there are pockets of water in the shell.”

He added: “If the mechanism we see in Greenland is how these things happen on Europa, it suggests there is water everywhere.”

The breakthrough came by accident — with researchers studying climate change.

Riley Culberg, a PhD student at Stanford, said it “opens up all these new possibilities for a very exciting discovery.”

This story originally appeared on The Sun and was reproduced here with permission.

source: nypost.com


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