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NASA to test if Jupiter moon could support life

NASA’s Europa ­Clipper probe has blasted off, bound for an icy moon of Jupiter to discover whether it could support life.

A SpaceX Falcon Heavy rocket with the Europa Clipper spacecraft aboard launches from NASA's Kennedy Space Centre in Cape Canaveral. Picture: AFP.
A SpaceX Falcon Heavy rocket with the Europa Clipper spacecraft aboard launches from NASA's Kennedy Space Centre in Cape Canaveral. Picture: AFP.

NASA’s Europa ­Clipper probe has blasted off from Florida, bound for an icy moon of Jupiter to discover whether it has the ingredients to support life.

Lift-off aboard a SpaceX ­Falcon Heavy rocket took place shortly after noon, with the probe set to reach Jupiter’s moon ­Europa in 5½ years.

NASA later confirmed that it had received a signal from the probe and that its massive solar arrays – designed to capture the weak light that reaches Jupiter – had fully unfolded.

The mission will allow the US space agency to uncover new ­details about Europa, which scientists believe could hold an ocean beneath its icy surface. “With Europa Clipper, we’re not searching for life on Europa, but we’re trying to see if this ocean world is habitable, and that means we’re looking for the water,” NASA official Gina DiBraccio said.

“We’re looking for energy sources, and we’re really looking for the chemistry there, so that we can understand what habitable environments might be throughout our whole universe.”

If life’s ingredients are found, another mission would then have to make the journey to try to ­detect it.

“It’s a chance for us to explore not a world that might have been habitable billions of years ago” like Mars, Europa Clipper program scientist Curt Niebur said, “but a world that might be habitable today, right now.”

At 30m wide with its solar panels fully extended, the probe is the largest ever designed by NASA for interplanetary ­exploration.

While Europa’s existence has been known since 1610, the first close-up images were taken by the Voyager probes in 1979, which revealed mysterious reddish lines crisscrossing its surface.

The next probe to reach Jupiter’s icy moon was NASA’s Galileo probe in the 1990s, which found it was highly likely that the moon was home to an ocean.

AFP

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Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/world/nasa-to-test-if-jupiter-moon-could-support-life/news-story/63617d3ce12eddacacc45abf3b310c54