Well…

It has been a while since I’ve updated this journal. Seems like time just slipped away what with “Real Life” just intervening when it felt like it.

My latest “Real Life” Adventure was the American Astronomical Society meeting in Albuquerque, New Mexico. I’ve been a member for about 8 or 9 years now and try attend both meetings (one in January, one in June) when time and finances permit. About 1400 astronomers attended this one!

At the end of the meeting I took off on a couple of field trips: one to the Very Large Array radio telescope facility in central New Mexico. Had a chance to crawl up inside one of the dishes that was in the barn for refurbishment, and take some lovely photographs of one arm of the array. For those of you who are into movies, this installation is where parts of “Contact” were filmed some years back.

The other place our group visited was the Apache Point Observatory installations — including the
Sloan Digital Sky Survey telescope, and the nearby National Solar Observatory Sacramento Peak Solar Observatory at Sunspot, New Mexico. Some pretty amazing science is being done using these places.

The view from Sac Peak is stunning. It looks out over the White Sands Monument, west of Alamogordo, NM — and you can see for well over a hundred miles on a clear day (or millions of light-years on a clear night!).

All these Worlds…

In Arthur C. Clark’s novel, 2010, the story ends with a warning to humans ready to explore the Jovian moons: “All these worlds are yours — except Europa. Attempt no landings there.” In the next book, we learn that life has made a foothold on this icy-looking world.

Science fiction or science fact? It is possible that life could exist in water oceans beneath the thin ice crust of this little moon. Is it probable? We don’t know.

Conamara Chaos on Europa
Conamara Chaos on Europa

The Voyager and Galileo missions have mapped this world extensively, studying its icy surface. In the image shown here (taken by the Galileo spacecraft’s cameras), we see an area on Europa called the Conamara region. It is basically a frozen set of “ice rafts” created when large blocks of ice were disrupted during an impact. After the ripples from the crash died down, these “rafts” and criss-crossed cracks froze into place on the little moon’s surface. This event formed a crater Pwyll, which lies 1000 kilometers (640 miles) away.

Beneath this jumbled icy terrain lies an ocean of what is probably slushy ice water. At the core of this tiny world, there could be heat — generated by the continual and combined tidal pull of Jupiter on one side of Europa and the outer moons on the other side. If there IS heat at the center of this watery world, it’s possible that life could survive there. But, for now, we don’ t know if there are any Europan life forms colonizing these oceans. That discovery awaits future visits by robotic spacecraft, and eventually — human explorers.