NASA Wants to Explore the Icy Moons of Jupiter and Saturn With Autonomous Robots

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Europa’s orbit is an ellipse, and the satellite’s shape is affected by Jupiter’s gravity, becoming deformed when it passes closer to Jupiter.

This change in shape creates friction inside Europa, generating enormous amounts of heat in a mechanism known as tidal heating, which melts some of the ice and forms a vast internal ocean beneath the moon’s thick ice shell.

Europa’s internal ocean is salty and is estimated to be about 100 kilometers deep on average, with a total volume of water twice that of all Earth’s oceans, despite this moon being considerably smaller than our planet.

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Comparison of Earth’s oceans and Europa’s inner oceans.

Illustration: NASA/JPL-Caltech

In addition, it is believed that internal oceans exist on Jupiter’s moons Ganymede and Callisto and Saturn’s moons Titan and Enceladus.

Liquid water is essential for life as we know it, which is why the ocean worlds are at the forefront of the search for extraterrestrial life.

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The European Space Agency’s Jupiter Ice Explorer is a spacecraft that will be used to explore Jupiter’s ice caps.

Photograph: ESA/M. Pedoussaut

Under the Sea (of Ice)

The autonomous underwater exploration robots envisioned by SWIM are extremely small. Their wedge-shaped bodies are about 12 centimeters long. A device called a “cryobot” will transport the robots beneath the thick ice shells of these moons, using nuclear energy to melt the ice. The idea is to pack about four dozen robots into the cryobot and have them penetrate the thick ice shell over the course of several years.

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A conceptual drawing of SWIM, with the cylindrical probe in the upper left corner.

Illustration: Ethan Schaler/NASA/JPL-Caltech

There are benefits to sending out such a large number of exploration robots. One is that they can explore a wider area. Another is that they are envisioned to operate in teams, so that multiple robots can explore the same area in overlapping directions, reducing errors in the observation data.

Each robot will be equipped with sensors to measure temperature, pressure, acidity, electrical conductivity, and chemical composition of the waters it explores. All of these sensors will be mounted on a chip measuring just a few millimeters square.

“People might ask, why is NASA developing an underwater robot for space exploration?” says Ethan Schaller, project leader at NASA’s JPL, explaining the motivation behind SWIM. “Because there are places in the solar system that we want to go to look for life—and we think life requires liquid water.”

This story originally appeared on WIRED Japan and has been translated from Japanese.

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