'Ocean of water found' on moon of Saturn
A watery ocean may lie beneath the surface of Saturn's largest moon, Titan, scientists believe.
Gravity measurements reveal deformations in Titan's interior that suggest a layer of liquid "sloshing around".
The ocean is thought to be made of water with a depth of a couple of hundred kilometres. It appears to cover the entire moon beneath 100 kilometres of ice.
The evidence comes from the American space agency Nasa's probe Cassini, which made six fly-bys of Titan between 2006 and 2011.
Scientists used signals beamed back by Cassini to measure distortions in Titan's gravitational field.
The data showed something strange happening in the moon's interior which indicated the presence of liquid water.
Writing in the journal Science, the planetary experts led by Dr Luciano Iess, from La Sapienza University in Rome, concluded:
Titan is now believed to belong to an elite "club" of moons with sub-surface oceans. Other members include Jupiter's moons Europa, Ganymede and Callisto.
Scientists have speculated about the possibility of life evolving in the hidden oceans. But there are doubts about whether anything could survive on icy Titan.
In a news story accompanying the research paper, Science writer Richard Kerr says: