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Ongoing hydrothermal activities within Enceladus
Author(s) -
H. W. Hsu,
F. Postberg,
Yasuhito Sekine,
Takazo Shibuya,
S. Kempf,
M. Horányi,
Á. Juhász,
Nicolás Altobelli,
Katsuhiko Suzuki,
Masaki Yoshio,
Tatsu Kuwatani,
Shogo Tachibana,
Sin-iti Sirono,
G. Moragas-Klostermeyer,
R. Srama
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
nature
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 15.993
H-Index - 1226
eISSN - 1476-4687
pISSN - 0028-0836
DOI - 10.1038/nature14262
Subject(s) - enceladus , plume , hydrothermal circulation , geology , saturn , astrobiology , regolith , crust , panache , tidal heating , hydrothermal vent , geochemistry , planet , physics , astronomy , meteorology , paleontology
Detection of sodium-salt-rich ice grains emitted from the plume of the Saturnian moon Enceladus suggests that the grains formed as frozen droplets from a liquid water reservoir that is, or has been, in contact with rock. Gravitational field measurements suggest a regional south polar subsurface ocean of about 10 kilometres thickness located beneath an ice crust 30 to 40 kilometres thick. These findings imply rock-water interactions in regions surrounding the core of Enceladus. The resulting chemical 'footprints' are expected to be preserved in the liquid and subsequently transported upwards to the near-surface plume sources, where they eventually would be ejected and could be measured by a spacecraft. Here we report an analysis of silicon-rich, nanometre-sized dust particles (so-called stream particles) that stand out from the water-ice-dominated objects characteristic of Saturn. We interpret these grains as nanometre-sized SiO2 (silica) particles, initially embedded in icy grains emitted from Enceladus' subsurface waters and released by sputter erosion in Saturn's E ring. The composition and the limited size range (2 to 8 nanometres in radius) of stream particles indicate ongoing high-temperature (>90 °C) hydrothermal reactions associated with global-scale geothermal activity that quickly transports hydrothermal products from the ocean floor at a depth of at least 40 kilometres up to the plume of Enceladus.

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