With Europa and Enceladus getting most of the attention for their subsurface oceans and potential to host life, other frozen worlds have been left in the shadows—but the mysterious Jovian moon Ganymede is now making headlines.
While Ganymede hasn’t yet been observed spewing plumes of water vapor like Saturn’s moon Enceladus, Jupiter’s largest moon is most likely hiding an enormous saltwater ocean. Hubble observations suggest that the ocean—thought to sit under 150 km (95 miles) of ice—could be up to 100 km (60 miles) deep. That’s 10 times deeper than the ocean on Earth.
Ganymede is having a moment because NASA’s Juno mission observed salts and organic compounds on its surface, possibly from an ocean that lies beneath its crust of ice. While Juno’s observations can’t provide decisive evidence that this moon has an ocean that makes Earth look like a kiddie pool, the Juno findings are the strongest evidence yet of salts and other chemicals making it to the exterior of Ganymede.
Fathoms below
The surface of Ganymede is already known to be made of water ice. Juno’s JIRAM (Jovian Infrared Auroral Mapper) instrument has now used its infrared vision to identify substances that included hydrated and ammoniated salts, sodium bicarbonate, hydrated silica, and what might be aliphatic aldehydes, which can potentially build more complex organic compounds. Hydrated salt (hydrated sodium chloride) may hint at a briny ocean below the surface ice. Juno mission scientists think that ammoniated salt (ammonium chloride) found on the surface could possibly mean that as Ganymede formed, it somehow accumulated substances cold enough to make ammonia condense. Carbonate salts might be leftovers from ices rich in carbon dioxide.
“The composition and spatial distribution of these salts and organics suggest that their origin is endogenic, resulting from the extrusion of subsurface brines, whose chemistry reflects the water–rock interaction inside Ganymede,” the scientists wrote in a study recently published in Nature.
Anything endogenic originates from the inside of a moon, planet, or other body, while exogenic substances originate on the surface. If the salts and organics found really are endogenic, it means they somehow rose from the depths of Ganymede. They may have traveled in water that oozed through cracks in the surface instead of being ejected in the form of vaporous plumes, such as those on Enceladus.

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