Jupiter's Io -The Volcano Epicenter of the Solar System
These images of Jupiter's intensely volcanic moon, Io, taken five months apart, show the results of a titanic eruption, 400-kilometers (250 miles) across over Pillan Patera. The ability to monitor such changes over a period of years was one of the Galileo Spacecraft's important scientific contributions.
Orbiting the giant planet Jupiter is the fascinating moon, Io, one of four moons discovered by Galileo in 1610. One look at Io and it is obvious that something unusual is going on there. Its mottled surface is a collage of colors-yellow, orange, red, and blackish browns - which make it look somewhat like a gigantic pizza. The explanation for this remarkable color palette is found down on the surface. Io is literally bursting with volcanic activity. Volcanoes spew out vast amounts of sulfurous material which cover Io's Iandscape, which reflects the various colors that sulfur takes on at different temperatures.
Intense radiation from Jupiter's atmosphere over the course of the Galileo mission severely damaged the craft's computer circuitry and resulted in failure of the computer systems. In order to prevent the possibility of the crippled spacecraft contaminating the environment of Io's neighboring moon, Europa, which may harbor a liquid water ocean beneath its surface, the spacecraft was plunged into the atmosphere of Jupiter on September 21, 2003.
Io is the most volcanically active body in the solar system. Volcanic
plumes rise 300 kilometers (190 miles) above the surface, with material
spewing out at nearly half the required escape velocity.
A bit larger than Earth's moon, Io is the third largest of Jupiter's moons, and the fifth one in distance from the planet.
in its widely varying distances from Jupiter, Io is subjected to
tremendous tidal forces. These forces cause Io's surface to bulge up
and down (or in and out) by as much as 100 meters (330 feet). On
Earth, in the place where tides are highest, the difference between low
and high tides is only 18 meters (60 feet), and this is for water, not
solid ground.
This tidal pumping generates a tremendous amount of heat within Io,
keeping much of its subsurface crust in liquid form, seeking any
available escape route to the surface to relieve the pressure. Thus,
the surface of Io is constantly renewing itself, filling in any impact
craters with molten lava lakes and spreading smooth new floodplains of
liquid rock. The composition of this material is not yet entirely
clear, but theories suggest that it is largely molten sulfur and its
compounds (which would account for the coloring differentals) or silicate
rock (which would better account for the apparent temperatures, which
may be too hot to be sulfur). Sulfur dioxide is the primary constituent
of a thin atmosphere on Io. It has no water to speak of, unlike the
other, colder Galilean moons. Data from the Galileo spacecraft
indicates that an iron core may form Io's center, thus giving Io its
own magnetic field.
Io's orbit, keeping it at more or less a cozy 422,000 kilometers
(262,000 miles) from Jupiter, cuts across the planet's powerful
magnetic lines of force, thus turning Io into a electric generator. Io
can develop 400,000 volts across itself and create an electric current
of 3 million amperes. This current takes the path of least resistance
along Jupiter's magnetic field lines to the planet's surface, creating
lightning in Jupiter's upper atmosphere.
Posted by Casey Kazan. Adapted from NASA documents.
Source:
http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/planets/profile.cfm?Object=Io



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Posted by: surf | July 14, 2008 at 01:06 AM
Would all this rampant volcanism be detrimental to the formation & evolution of indigenous life forms & an ecology supporting them ? You've got to wonder.....
Posted by: knoxvilledaniel | July 16, 2008 at 12:15 PM
One also has to wonder what kind of resources - like possible fuel sources - might exist in Io's chemical make - up.
Posted by: knoxvilledaniel | July 16, 2008 at 12:18 PM