Where can we find water?
Importance of water to life Water to drink; we need to stay hydrated to remain alive; we are 55 – 75% water! Solar energy converted by plants; water is the catalyst that helps plants grow. Water vapor in the atmosphere traps radiation and warms up the Earth. Earth’s oceans affect climate and store heat.
H 2 O NH 3 CH 4 W ater, A mmonia, M ethane CO 2 CO N 2 Ignore inert gases He, Ne, Ar The Cosmic Abundance of Elements
Water phase diagram
Can there be ice on the Moon? Comets and asteroids could have left water on the Moon – just like on Earth? Effects of temperature and pressure implies water sublimates in sunlight and drifts off into space. Moon has deep cold craters where sunlight cannot reach! –Water may exist in such places as frozen ice
There are many craters near the poles that are permanently shadowed South PoleNorth Pole
What is the evidence for ice on the Moon? Lunar Prospector shows enhancement of H, indicating possible presence of ice
Water in the solar system - Mars Indications that water once flowed on the surface. Much of the water may exist as subsurface ice.
Water in the solar system - Comets Detected in comet’s tails. Up to 80% can be water ice.
Comet Borrelly Deep Space 1 Comet Wild 2 Stardust
Deep Impact-July 2006
Then there’s Ceres… Ceres (largest asteroid) discovered in Average density of the asteroids ~5g/ml Ceres density ~2.1 g/ml Comets avg. density ~1,5-2.0 g/ml Dawn mission on the way to Ceres (2011)
Ceres, as imaged by Dawn 1/14/15
The Top Four Icy Moons Europa Triton Enceladus Titan
Most icy satellites are smaller than our moon. What surface features should we see on them? Europa Triton Enceladus Titan Jupiter Neptune Saturn
Huygens images of Titan’s surface
Methane lakes on Titan
A water-ammonia volcano on Titan through 3 wavelengths L-Infrared, C-Radar, R-Ultraviolet
Fountains of Enceladus
Enceladus
Neptune’s moon Triton-a Plutonian twin? Triton and Pluto at Best HST Resolution Triton from Voyager
Importance of water in human space exploration Water to drink. Water to grow plants. Water can be broken apart to make air (oxygen) and rocket fuel (oxygen + hydrogen) Water can be used to provide electrical power (fuel cells used by Gemini, Apollo, and ISS). Water for protection. Water is heavy, too expensive to carry.