The planet Jupiter's four largest moons are called the
Galilean satellites, after Italian astronomer Galileo Galilei, who observed
them in 1610. The German astronomer Simon Marius claimed to have seen the moons
around the same time, but he did not publish his observations and so Galileo is
given the credit for their discovery. These large moons, named Io, Europa,
Ganymede, and Callisto, are each distinctive worlds.
Io is the most volcanically active body in the solar system.
Io's surface is covered by sulfur in different colorful forms. As Io travels in
its slightly elliptical orbit, Jupiter's immense gravity causes
"tides" in the solid surface that rise 100 m (300 feet) high on Io,
generating enough heat for volcanic activity and to drive off any water. Io's
volcanoes are driven by hot silicate magma.
Europa's surface is mostly water ice, and there is evidence
that it may be covering an ocean of water or slushy ice beneath. Europa is
thought to have twice as much water as does Earth. This moon intrigues
astrobiologists because of its potential for having a "habitable
zone." Life forms have been found thriving near subterranean volcanoes on
Earth and in other extreme locations that may be analogues to what may exist on
Europa.
Ganymede is the largest moon in the solar system (larger
than the planet Mercury), and is the only moon known to have its own internally
generated magnetic field.
Callisto's surface is extremely heavily cratered and ancient
-- a visible record of events from the early history of the solar system.
However, the very few small craters on Callisto indicate a small degree of
current surface activity.
The interiors of Io, Europa and Ganymede have a layered
structure (as does Earth). Io has a core, and a mantle of at least partially
molten rock, topped by a crust of solid rock coated with sulfur compounds.
Europa and Ganymede both have a core; a rock envelope around the core; a thick,
soft ice layer; and a thin crust of impure water ice. In the case of Europa, a
global subsurface water layer probably lies just below the icy crust. Layering
at Callisto is less well defined and appears to be mainly a mixture of ice and
rock.
Three of the moons influence each other in an interesting
way. Io is in a tug-of-war with Ganymede and Europa, and Europa's orbital
period (time to go around Jupiter once) is twice Io's period, and Ganymede's
period is twice that of Europa. In other words, every time Ganymede goes around
Jupiter once, Europa makes two orbits and Io makes four orbits. The moons all
keep the same face towards Jupiter as they orbit, meaning that each moon turns
once on its axis for every orbit around Jupiter.
Pioneers 10 and 11 (1973 to 1974) and Voyager 1 and Voyager
2 (1979) offered striking color views and global perspectives from their flybys
of the Jupiter system. From 1995 to 2003, the Galileo spacecraft made
observations from repeated elliptical orbits around Jupiter, passing as low as
261 km (162 miles) over the surfaces of the Galilean moons. These close
approaches resulted in images with unprecedented detail of selected portions of
the surfaces.
Close-up images taken by the Galileo spacecraft of portions
of Europa's surface show places where ice has broken up and moved apart, and
where liquid may have come from below and frozen smoothly on the surface. The
low number of craters on Europa leads scientists to believe that a subsurface
ocean has been present in recent geologic history and may still exist today.
The heat needed to melt the ice in a place so far from the sun is thought to
come from inside Europa, resulting primarily from the same type of tidal forces
that drive Io's volcanoes. continuous radiation from Jupiter's exterior and
high-energy particles in its radiation bands.
No comments:
Post a Comment