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Scientists will soon be looking for water on Uranus...

posted 10/12/2009 12:30:40 PM |
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tagged: science, exploration, budget, humor
  chatillion

Why stop at the moon? If you can convince someone in the government we 'need this' they will appropriate lots-o-money for future missions.
I'm not saying we should abandon all space exploration, I'm saying if it's not going to significantly help mankind in this and the next generation, maybe we should just put these plans on the back burner, or better yet... forgetaboutit.

If left unchecked... who knows what experiments scientists will dream up.

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Scientists will soon be looking for water on Uranus...
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Comments:
RightWingRepublican

Oct 12 @ 2:04PM  
Floating mice, you forgot about the floating mice.

cbond35

Oct 12 @ 4:37PM  
Liquid Water on Saturn Moon Enceladus

The Cassini spacecraft has found evidence of liquid water spewing from geysers on one of Saturn's icy moons, raising the tantalizing possibility that the celestial object harbors life.

The surprising discovery excited some scientists, who say the Saturn moon, Enceladus, should be added to the short list of places within the solar system most likely to have extraterrestrial life.

Recent high-resolution images snapped by the orbiting Cassini confirmed the eruption of icy jets and giant water vapor plumes from geysers resembling frozen Old Faithfuls at Enceladus' south pole.

''We have the smoking gun'' that proves the existence of water, said Carolyn Porco, a Cassini imaging scientist from the Space Science Institute in Boulder, Colo.

If Enceladus does harbor life, it probably consists of microbes or other primitive organisms capable of living in extreme conditions, scientists say.

The findings were published in Friday's issue of the journal Science.

David Morrison, a senior scientist at NASA's Astrobiology Institute, cautioned against rushing to judgment about whether the tiny moon could support life. Scientists generally agree habitats need several ingredients for life to emerge, including water, a stable heat source and the right chemical recipe.

''It's certainly interesting, but I don't see how much more you can say beyond that,'' Morrison said.

Scientists believe Mars and Jupiter's icy moons might have -- or once had -- conditions hospitable to life.

Saturn is around 800 million miles from Earth. Enceladus measures 314 miles across and is the shiniest object in the solar system.

It was long thought to be cold and still. But scientists now believe it is a geologically active moon that possesses an unusually warm south pole.

The water is believed to vent from fissures in the south pole. Porco said the venting has probably been going on for at least several thousand years, potentially providing a lasting heat source.

The Cassini-Huygens mission is a joint NASA-European Space Agency project. The spacecraft was launched in 1997 and went into orbit around Saturn in 2004, exploring its spectacular rings and many moons. Cassini made three flybys of Enceladus last year and is expected to fly within 220 miles of the moon again in 2008.
chatillion

Oct 12 @ 5:09PM  
OK, so some of Saturn's 61 Moons are believed to have water. What about Uranus?
bardnsage

Oct 12 @ 7:55PM  
Damn,,, all you have to do is eat 2 bowls of pintos,,, and 2 bowls of collards with fatback,,,with a pickeled egg chaser,,,, and there will be water all over your Uranus.

cbond35

Oct 16 @ 9:57AM  
OK, so some of Saturn's 61 Moons are believed to have water. What about Uranus?

My point was that there is probably water on a lot of planets and moons........We just can't prove it yet.
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Scientists will soon be looking for water on Uranus...