Saturn's moon Enceladus got humanity's attention in 2005 when surprised astronomers detected jets of ice and gas spraying out from the moon's icy surface, and since then researchers have eagerly investigated the possibility that the jets might emanate from liquid oceans beneath the frozen crust. A moon with liquid water would be of great interest, because it would be more likely to host extraterrestrial microbes. Now, two new studies with somewhat contradictory results have deepened the mystery of what lies beneath Enceladus's shell of ice.
Both groups of researchers were looking for sodium near Enceladus; one found it, the other didn't. Sodium is interesting because it indicates that deep under the ice, liquid water has been in contact with rocks, which leach salts [ScienceNOW Daily News].
The dissolved sodium, along with water, would be shot into space in the geysers, and some of the sodium would be trapped in ice ...