Tuesday, February 10, 2026
ADVT 
International

Signs of Europa's plumes remain elusive

Darpan News Desk IANS, 21 Dec, 2014 12:12 PM
    A fresh look at data collected by NASA's Cassini spacecraft during its 2001 flyby of Jupiter shows that its moon Europa's tenuous atmosphere is even thinner than previously thought.
     
    The thin, hot gas around the moon does not show evidence of plume activity occurring at the time of Cassini flyby en route to Saturn in 2001, the US space agency said in a statement.
     
    Members of Cassini's ultraviolet imaging spectrograph (UVIS) team analysed data collected by their instrument.
     
    Europa contributes 40 times less oxygen than previously thought to its surrounding environment, calculated the study.
     
    "Our work shows that researchers have been overestimating the density of Europa's atmosphere by quite a bit," said Don Shemansky, a Cassini UVIS team member with Space Environment Technologies in Pasadena, California and lead author.
     
    "It is certainly still possible that plume activity occurs, but that it is infrequent or the plumes are smaller than we see at Enceladus," said Amanda Hendrix, a Cassini UVIS team member with the Planetary Science Institute in Pasadena.
     
    Europa is considered one of the exciting destinations in the solar system for future exploration due to strong indications of having an ocean beneath its icy crust.
     
    Most of the hot, excited gas or plasma around Europa originates not from the moon itself but from volcanoes on the nearby moon Io.
     
    The moon's tenuous atmosphere, which was already thought to be millions of times thinner than Earth's atmosphere, is actually about 100 times less dense than those previous estimates.
     
    "We found no evidence for water near Europa, even though we have readily detected it as it erupts in the plumes of Enceladus," explained Larry Esposito from University of Colorado.
     
    "Studies like this make the most of the data we have and help guide the kinds of of science investigations NASA should pursue in the future," concluded Curt Niebur, Outer Planets programme scientist at NASA headquarters in Washington.
     
    The study appeared in the journal Astrophysical Journal.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    33 IS militants killed in Iraq's Mosul, two towns retaken

    33 IS militants killed in Iraq's Mosul, two towns retaken
    At least 33 militants of the Islamic State (IS) died Monday in the Iraqi city of Mosul and the surrounding area, including a leader who was responsible for the sale...

    33 IS militants killed in Iraq's Mosul, two towns retaken

    Stand up for your rights, Imran Khan tells Pakistanis

    Stand up for your rights, Imran Khan tells Pakistanis
    Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI) chief Imran Khan said Sunday that the people of Pakistan must stand up for their rights, when the party holds a rally Nov 30 in Islamabad....

    Stand up for your rights, Imran Khan tells Pakistanis

    Train with MH17 wreckage arrives in Ukraine's Kharkiv

    Train with MH17 wreckage arrives in Ukraine's Kharkiv
    A train carrying the wreckage of the Malaysia Airlines passenger plane that crashed in eastern Ukraine in July arrived Monday in the city of Kharkiv...

    Train with MH17 wreckage arrives in Ukraine's Kharkiv

    Obama defends his immigration reform plan

    Obama defends his immigration reform plan
    US President Barack Obama has defended his immigration reform plans, which could protect five million undocumented immigrants from deportation....

    Obama defends his immigration reform plan

    Sharif urges Obama to take up Kashmir issue with India

    Sharif urges Obama to take up Kashmir issue with India
    US President Barack Obama spoke to Pakistan Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif over telephone Friday and urged him to take up the Kashmir issue with India....

    Sharif urges Obama to take up Kashmir issue with India

    Obama's immigration plan falls short of Indian techies' hopes

    Obama's immigration plan falls short of Indian techies' hopes
    As President Barack Obama camapaigned to sell his immigration plan to shield up to five million people from deportation and retain high-skilled immigrants...

    Obama's immigration plan falls short of Indian techies' hopes