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In 1610, Galileo spotted a small, smooth moon circling Jupiter and wrote it down; four hundred years later, scientists confirmed it likely holds the largest ocean in the solar system, buried under ice and never once touched by sunlight - Space Daily

In 1610, Galileo spotted a small, smooth moon circling Jupiter and wrote it down; four hundred years later, scientists confirmed it likely holds the largest ocean in the solar system, buried under ice and never once touched by sunlight Space Daily Ground-ba...

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AI summary

In 1610, Galileo spotted a small, smooth moon circling Jupiter and wrote it down; four hundred years later, scientists confirmed it likely holds the largest ocean in the solar system, buried under ice and never once touched by sunlight Space Daily Ground-ba...

What happened

In 1610, Galileo spotted a small, smooth moon circling Jupiter and wrote it down; four hundred years later, scientists confirmed it likely holds the largest ocean in the solar system, buried under ice and never once touched by sunlight Space Daily Ground-ba...

Why it matters

This science report is being tracked from Space Daily because it may affect readers, markets, policy, culture, or daily decisions.

Key facts
  • Category: science
  • Edition: ZA
  • Fetched: Sat, 04 Jul 2026 05:35:59 GMT

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