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muckel3302
7 months ago

Liquid water on the surface is available only on earth, but water in the form of ice is very common in the solar system, e.g. on Mars the poles consist partly of water ice, the Jupiter Moon Europe consists in large parts of water ice, as is the Saturn Moon Enceladus, which also conveys water from the depth into space through cryovulcanism. And of course, the countless comets in the solar system also consist largely of ice, as well as the core areas of Uranus and Neptun, which are also called ice planets. Also on the earth’s moon there are ice, but only on the basis of large craters in the pole regions, because no sunlight can ever reach the bottom of this crater. The ice came almost from the comets who broke in there, but also from the interaction with the sun wind particles that hit the moon unhindered. If energy-charged protons meet oxygen in the rock, then water can also arise.

Bujin
7 months ago

Liquid water on the surface is only available on earth. Water in the form of ice also on Mars and a few moons of Saturn and Jupiter. Titanium, Enceladus and Europe as an example.

It is believed that the ice moon Enceladus could also have an ocean under its ice crusade. Geysire are a hint of it. The heat that is necessary to melt the water could result from deformation work in the stone core. Since the moon is relatively close to its planting, it is deformed by tidal forces.

SirSulas74
7 months ago

Water can exist everywhere, even in the sun there are small quantities, but mostly in the form of ice.

ChillOut2024
7 months ago

Earth is the only planet in the solar system with liquid water on the surface. But also on Mars it was warm and damp in the past.

Dassistzulang
7 months ago

venus, erde, mars , uranus, neptun

noname68
7 months ago
Reply to  Dassistzulang

on the venus in no case more, in all others only as ice