
A close up view by the Cassini spacecraft of the Saturn moon, Enceladus' northern pole. (AP Photo/NASA)
The moon is an icy body called Enceladus (en-SELL-uh-duss). It gives off huge plumes of water vapor and ice grains, and scientists used the Cassini spacecraft to sample material from those jets.
They found particles containing sodium salts, which indicates that the plumes arise from liquid water.
But a second team of scientists found no sign of sodium with a different sampling method. They concluded there could still be a deep ocean on Enceladus, but that there are also other possible explanations for the moon's jets.
Both papers are reported in Thursday's issue of the journal Nature.