RundownPear t1_isspxml wrote
Reply to comment by AsIfIKnowWhatImDoin in The Europa Clipper mission may be as exciting as a manned mars mission and it’s only two years away by Wide-Escape-5618
No, it really doesn't. Earth's deep oceans are actually significantly colder the deeper you go.
AsIfIKnowWhatImDoin t1_issqix5 wrote
Yes, but closer to geothermal activity that does not exist on the surface.
[deleted] t1_isssu10 wrote
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AsIfIKnowWhatImDoin t1_issuzh7 wrote
Vents, amigo. Vents. Not proximity, but vents. That liquid has to be warmed by something.
RundownPear t1_issyhfp wrote
But those vents still do not lead to a warmer ocean overall, just warm areas. Earths deep ocean isn’t considered warm because it has vent scattered across the base.
AsIfIKnowWhatImDoin t1_ist0bb1 wrote
You just keep moving those goalposts, dontcha'? So anyway....warm water!
RundownPear t1_ist6478 wrote
Being "closer to the core" doesn't mean a warmer ocean. Deeper oceans are colder. Europa's ocean, assuming it does exist since it's still just a theory based on the moons low electrical conductivity and observed ice crust, would theoretically be warmed by tidal flexing caused by its orbit around Jupiter.
AsIfIKnowWhatImDoin t1_ist86qw wrote
I never said 'warm ocean'--that's something you made up and are running with.
I said 'warm water' and that is very much a possibility given the depth.
RundownPear t1_istawim wrote
Ok, still applies to warm water. Warm water being present has nothing to do with distance from the core of a planet or moon.
JUYED-AWK-YACC t1_isthufp wrote
I thought that it was due to tidal forces from Jupiter, flexing the shape of the ice shell. You can’t generate heat by mixing liquid water with ice.
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