One hundred kilometers beneath the rocky crust on Titan, Saturn’s largest moon, is an ocean of water spanning the entirety of the celestial body, planetary scientists said.
The ocean was hypothesized in 2011, based on Titan’s rotation and orbital movement. The theory was confirmed by a study based on data from the Cassini-Huygens probe, published on Thursday in Science magazine.
The ocean theory implied that Titan is becoming slightly deformed by Saturn’s gravity when it nears the planet, something that would not have happened if Titan were completely solid.
A team headed by Italian researcher Luciano Iess studied the influence of Titan’s gravity on the probe during numerous flybys and discovered that the moon’s gravity slightly varied, in line with the ocean theory.
The ocean is probably saturated with ammonia or its sulfate and cold, unlike on Jupiter’s moon, Europa, whose underground waters are heated by geysers, the report said.
This, along with the lack of minerals, makes Titan’s currently nameless ocean an unlikely place to produce life, the study said.
However, other studies indicate that some bacteria are capable of surviving in extreme environments, and even propose the possibility of life based on different biochemistry than on Earth, including arsenic.
Titan, one of Saturn’s 13 major moons, was discovered in 1655 by Christiaan Huygens, but its study is complicated by its dense atmosphere.
The Hyugens unmanned probe, delivered by the Cassini mission dispatched in 1997 to study Saturn, successfully landed on Titan in 2005, becoming the most distant landing of manmade spacecraft in history. It transmitted data for about 90 minutes after touchdown.