BrainStuff Classics: Could Jupiter Have Water After All? - podcast episode cover

BrainStuff Classics: Could Jupiter Have Water After All?

Oct 02, 20225 min
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Episode description

Astronomers have long suspected that Jupiter contains lots of water, but they've never been able to prove it. Learn about the new research that could help -- and thus solve lots of questions about our solar system -- in this classic episode of BrainStuff, based on this article: https://science.howstuffworks.com/great-red-spot-may-expose-jupiters-watery-secret.htm

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Transcript

Speaker 1

Welcome to brain Stuff, a production of I Heart Radio. Hey brain Stuff, Lauren Vogelbaum here with a classic podcast episode. This one is about the question of whether there's water on Jupiter and the history of trying to figure that out. Since this episode aired, NASA and its partners have started receiving data back from the James Web Space Telescope, including some observations of Jupiter that may give us a more

definitive answer than ever. But while that data is being processed, here's what we know for now, Hey brain Stuff, Lauren Vogebom Here. Many mysteries hide beneath Jupiter's beautifully chaotic clouds, But with the help of some clever astronomical techniques and NASA's Juno spacecraft, one of the giant planet's biggest puzzles may be closer than ever to being solved. As we know, water is the key to life on Earth. Our efforts therefore to seek out life on other worlds hinges on

the detection of this import compound. Though scientists don't think that life inhabits Jupiter, finding a Jovian reservoir is one of the most pressing issues in planetary science. Locating this water would help us understand how the Solar System and Jupiter itself evolved. Unfortunately, Jupiter has been notoriously unhelpful at revealing any water deep in its thick atmosphere, leaving scientists

and their models of planetary formation high and dry. Before we sent spacecraft to investigate Jupiter, scientists assumed the gas giant would contain copious amounts of H two O. The logic was simple. Earth is covered in the wet stuff, and there's lots of water in the various moons that orbit the giant planets. Therefore, Jupiter, the most massive and most gravitationally dominant planet in the Solar System, must have trapped the lion's share of our Solar System's water as

it formed billions of years ago. That logic was shattered in when NASA's Galileo mission dropped a probe into the planet's atmosphere to measure its composition. Much to everyone's surprise, there was a punishing lack of water. But the Galileo probe may not have detected water simply because it wasn't dropped in the right place. It could be as if the probe parachuted over a desert on Earth. It's not that there's no water on Earth. It's just the deserts

aren't known for being awash with the stuff. Jupiter's atmosphere is dynamic with jet stream storms in a non homogeneous composition. The probe could only sample the atmosphere it was traveling through in that one location, and that location might have been as dry as a desert. The situation changed, however, when researchers used the powerful W. M. Keck Observatory and NASA Infrared Telescope facility on Hawaii's Mona Kea to stare

deep into Jupiter's biggest storm, the Great Red Spot. They released their water filled news in an August study published in the Astrophistical Journal and led by Gordon L. Bulaker of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center. Br Aker said in a NASA statement, the moons that orbit Jupiter are mostly water ice, so the whole neighborhood has plenty of water. Why wouldn't the planet, which is this huge gravity well

where everything falls into it, be water rich too. To investigate, Bureaker's team measured the infrared radiation leaking from deep beneath the clouds. Specifically, they studied the infrared absorption spectrum of a certain type of methane, which is known to exist in a vapor throughout the planet. This infrared radiation should leak through the clouds unimpeded, but should any water vapor

clouds be present, this radiation would be blocked. During analysis of observations from Jupiter's Great Red Spot, the researchers found three distinct cloud layers were blocking this infrared signal from passing through the atmosphere, thus agreeing with the theoretical predictions

for the presence of water rich clouds. They also detected large quantities of carbon monoxide, suggesting that there's lots of oxygen available in Jupiter's atmosphere to chemically bond with molecular hydrogen to form water if the temperature and pressure is just right. The next step will be to use these

data to complement the Juno spacecraft's observations of Jupiter. JUNO can make spectroscopic observations even deeper into Jupiter's atmosphere, and it will do so for the entire planet, not just the Great Red Spot. But should JUNO also detect this

possible water cloud layer. The techniques developed by Buelreaker's team using telescopes on Earth will have been proven effective at finding water deep inside Jupiter, thereby solving the gas giants watery mystery, and these techniques could then be used to probe deep into the atmospheres of other planets like Saturn, Uranus, or Neptune without having to send a probe into them. NASA named the Juno Mission, by the way, after the Roman goddess Juno, who was married to Jupiter and had

the handy ability to see through clouds. Today's episode is based on the article the Great Red Spot may expose Jupiter's watery secret on how stuff works dot com, written by Ian O'Neill. Brain Stuff is production of I heart Radio in partnership with how stuff Works dot Com and is produced by Tyler Klang. For more podcasts my heart Radio, visit the I heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.

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