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Space

Eris and Makemake might be hiding unexpected oceans of liquid water

Dwarf planets aren’t expected to carry liquid water, but hints of surprising geological activity spotted with JWST indicate that some of them might have buried oceans

By Leah Crane

21 September 2023

Artist's concept of Makemake

An artist’s illustration of Makemake

NASA, ESA, and A. Parker

Icy rocks in the outer solar system might have unexpected subsurface oceans. Eris and Makemake are both dwarf planets in the Kuiper belt – the ring of frozen objects that encircles our solar system beyond Neptune’s orbit – and new observations from the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) hint that these small worlds could have unexpected activity beneath their surfaces.

Kuiper belt objects, or KBOs, are generally thought of as similar to large, inactive comets, preserving pristine ices that formed in the early solar system. But Christopher…

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