They believe there is liquid water underneath its frozen surface. If there is liquid water on Europa, there might also be life.
They believe there is liquid water underneath its frozen surface. If there is liquid water on Europa, there might also be life.
They don't. No sensible astronomer thinks this is possible.
Astronomers have found evidence that leads them to think that there is a saline ocean under the H2O ice that dominates the surface of Europa. A saline environment would be amenable to life.
NOT A PIECE OF EVIDENCE (as the question asked for ): Astronomers have detected small lakes of liquid water on Europa's surface.
There is an ocean on Europa which contains liquid water. Other than the Earth, Europa is the only place in the solar system where we have found liquid water. Life as we know it is very dependent upon liquid water, and life is believed to have originally evolved in the water, before moving to the land.
Possibly. Europa has an ocean of liquid water under its icy crust, which might have light.
'cause it has an atmosphere
Europa
Many astronomers have discovered Jupiter's moons. Galileo discovered the first four moons of Jupiter, named Calisto, Europa, Ganymede and Io.
Europa is a moon of Jupiter, not a planet. It is the sixth-largest moon in the Solar System and is known for its subsurface ocean that could potentially harbor life.
Both are wrong astronomers made stuff up because they couldn't see anything and they could not prove anything.
Europa is 1 of Jupiter's 63 moons, one of the four Galilean moons, and it is important because it could posssibly hold life.