Richard C. Hoagland celebrates a major vindication as NASA's latest Europa images confirm his seventeen-year-old prediction of a liquid ocean beneath the Jovian moon's icy surface, while Whitley Strieber and Renee Barnett join to discuss strange phenomena across the cosmos. The Galileo spacecraft's stunning close-up images reveal a fractured, constantly shifting ice shell that strongly suggests a vast ocean containing more water than all of Earth's seas combined, exactly as Hoagland theorized in 1980. Tonight's Nightline coverage featured NASA scientists acknowledging the extraordinary possibilities for life in Europa's subsurface ocean, where volcanic vents could provide the energy sources necessary for complex biological evolution. Hoagland explains how tidal forces from Jupiter's immense gravitational field generate internal heating that maintains liquid water beneath miles of ice, creating conditions that could support not just microbes but potentially advanced life forms. The discussion explores NASA's aggressive new plans for Europa missions, including orbital reconnaissance and surface drilling operations that would penetrate the ice to directly sample the hidden ocean below. With characteristic insight into cutting-edge space science, Hoagland suggests that Europa may represent humanity's best opportunity to discover extraterrestrial life within our own solar system, fundamentally changing our understanding of where life can exist in the universe.