Fresh Tiger Stripes on Saturn's Enceladus

Model: gpt-4.1-mini
Prompt version: 1.0
Do underground oceans vent through canyons on Saturn’s moon Enceladus?
Long features dubbed tiger stripes are known to be spewing ice from the moon’s icy interior into space, creating a cloud of fine ice particles over the moon’s South Pole and creating Saturn’s mysterious E-ring.
Evidence for this has come from the robot Cassini spacecraft that orbited Saturn from 2004 to 2017.
Pictured here, a high resolution image of Enceladus is shown from a close flyby. The unusual surface features dubbed tiger stripes are visible in false-color blue.
Why Enceladus is active remains a mystery, as the neighboring moon Mimas, approximately the same size, appears quite dead.
An analysis of ejected ice grains has yielded evidence that complex organic molecules exist inside Enceladus. These large carbon-rich molecules bolster — but do not prove — that oceans under Enceladus’ surface could contain life.
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