Presence of sea salt on Europa's surface suggests the ocean is interacting with its rocky seafloor - an important consideration in determining whether the icy moon could support life.
"We have many questions about Europa, the most important and most difficult to answer being is there life? Research like this is important because it focuses on questions we can definitively answer, like whether or not Europa is inhabitable," said Curt Niebur, Outer Planets Programme scientist at NASA Headquarters here.
For more than a decade, scientists have wondered about the nature of the dark material that coats long, linear fractures and other relatively young geological features on Europa's surface.
Its association with young terrains suggests the material has erupted from within Europa, but with limited data available, the material's chemical composition has remained elusive.
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"If it's just salt from the ocean below, that would be a simple and elegant solution for what the dark, mysterious material is," said research lead Kevin Hand, a planetary scientist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California.
Theories proposed to explain the nature of the dark material include this radiation as a likely part of the process that creates it.
Previous studies using data from NASA's Galileo spacecraft, and various telescopes, attributed the discolourations on Europa's surface to compounds containing sulphur and magnesium.
While radiation-processed sulphur accounts for some of the colours on Europa, the new experiments reveal that irradiated salts could explain the colour within the youngest regions of the moon's surface.
For each material, they collected spectra - which are like chemical fingerprints - encoded in the light reflected by the compounds.
The study was published in the journal Geophysical Research Letters.