Scientists rattled: Finding Water on Jupiter's Moon

Scientists have found evidence of water vapor in the atmosphere of Jupiter's moon, Ganimed a discovery that is first made in our history. Using the two-decade data of the Nassa Space Telescope, Kubble, astronomers observed a strange phenomenon in ultra-virus images they received from the Jovian moon, reports Independent, translates [...]
Using the two-decade data of the Nassa Space Telescope, Kubble, astronomers noted a strange phenomenon in ultra-virus images they received from the Jovian moon, reports Independent, Periscope.
The first images, from 1998, were captured by electrified gas ribbons, also known as Aurora Bende from Ganimedi.
Astronomers then believed that this was the presence of oxygen, but the collected data did not match the expected body emissions that had an atmosphere of clean oxygen.
The strange information is believed to have been caused by the high concentration of atomic oxygen [only one molecule oxygen], but this could not have been higher in truth, in fact, there is hardly atomic oxygen in Ganimed's atmosphere.
Lawrence Roth, from the Royal Institute Sweden's KTH of Technology made the discovery with his team from the Humbble data in 2018.
The closest examinations of aurora distribution in ultra-vjoll images showed that the moon's icy surface turned into steam without first becoming liquid to produce small amounts of water molecules in the atmosphere. /Periscope











