Jupiter's Moons
Posted: Wed Jan 13, 2021 9:49 pm
Jupiter has 79 (discovered) moons. Some of them haven't even been officially named yet.
Source: NASAEleven Earths could fit across Jupiter’s equator. If Earth were the size of a grape, Jupiter would be the size of a basketball.
Source: NASAJupiter orbits about 484 million miles (778 million kilometers) or 5.2 Astronomical Units (AU) from our Sun (Earth is one AU from the Sun).
Source: NASAJupiter rotates once about every 10 hours (a Jovian day), but takes about 12 Earth years to complete one orbit of the Sun (a Jovian year).
Source: NASAJupiter is a gas giant and so lacks an Earth-like surface. If it has a solid inner core at all, it’s likely only about the size of Earth.
Source: NASAJupiter's atmosphere is made up mostly of hydrogen (H2) and helium (He).
Source: NASAJupiter has more than 75 moons.
Source: NASAIn 1979 the Voyager mission discovered Jupiter’s faint ring system. All four giant planets in our solar system have ring systems.
Source: NASANine spacecraft have visited Jupiter. Seven flew by and two have orbited the gas giant. Juno, the most recent, arrived at Jupiter in 2016.
Source: NASAJupiter cannot support life as we know it. But some of Jupiter's moons have oceans beneath their crusts that might support life.
Source: NASAJupiter's Great Red Spot is a gigantic storm that’s about twice the size of Earth and has raged for over a century.
Io's Pele volcano is certainly big and generates very tall plumes but I can't find any verification that it "reaches 16 kilometers" by any reasonable metric.Charlotte Bridgestone wrote: ↑Tue Jun 01, 2021 11:11 am
What is Io concerned - it is volcanically active satellite and the height of the mountains reaches 16 kilometers.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olympus_Mons wrote:
<<Olympus Mons is an enormous shield volcano on the planet Mars. The volcano has a height of over 21.9 km as measured by the Mars Orbiter Laser Altimeter (MOLA). Olympus Mons is about two and a half times Mount Everest's height above sea level. It is one of the largest volcanoes, the tallest planetary mountain, and the second tallest mountain currently discovered in the Solar System, comparable to Rheasilvia on Vesta. It is often cited as the largest volcano in the Solar System. However, by some metrics, other volcanoes are considerably larger. Alba Mons, northeast of Olympus Mons, has roughly 19 times the surface area, but is only about one third the height. Pele, the largest known volcano on Io, is also much larger, at roughly 4 times the surface area, but is considerably flatter.
Pele has a volcanic crater, also known a patera, 30 km by 20 km in size, which lies at the base of the northern tip of the mountain Danube Planum. The patera has multiple floor levels, with a higher north-eastern section and a lower section that consists of an east-west-trending graben. Volcanic activity at Pele, as seen in images taken by Galileo in October 2001 while Pele was on Io's night side, appears to be limited to small thermal "hot-spots" along the margins of the patera and a more intense thermal emission source within a dark area in the southeast portion of the patera floor. This distribution of activity, combined with Pele's stability as a hotspot in terms of temperature and power emitted, suggests that Pele is a large, active lava lake, a combination of eruption style and intensity of activity not seen elsewhere on Io. The small hotspots seen in the Galileo data represent areas where the crust of the lava lake breaks up along the margins of the patera, allowing fresh lava to become exposed at the surface. The southeastern portion of the patera, an area of dark terrain in Voyager 1 imagery, is the most active region of the Pele volcano, with the most extensive region of hot lava at Pele. This area is thought to be a vigorously overturning lava lake, suggestive of a combination of a large mass flux of lava to the lake from a magma reservoir below the surface and a large mass fraction of dissolved volatiles like sulfur dioxide and diatomic sulfur. Given Pele's brightness at near-infrared wavelengths, activity at this portion of the lava lake may also result in lava fountaining.>>
Charlotte Bridgestone wrote: ↑Wed Jun 02, 2021 8:56 am
Here is additional information about mountains on Io :
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mountains ... C700%20ft).
There you can find that the highest mountain on its surface reaches 17,5 km (Boösaule Montes, at 17,500 metres (57,400 ft), taller than any mountain on Earth.). This information was obtained through research of Galileo and Voyager missions.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bo%C3%B6saule_Montes wrote:
<<South Boösaule Mons, the highest mountain of Jupiter's moon Io, is one of the tallest mountains in the Solar System. It is located just northwest of the volcano Pele, in the Boösaule Montes. The official name of the mountain range [Greek Βοὸς αὐλή Boos aylē 'Cow pen'] was given in honor of the cave in Egypt where Io gave birth to Epaphus, and approved by the IAU in 1985. South Boösaule has a relative height of 18.2 km (17.5 km from the foot), dimensions of 145 × 159 km (the diameter of the mountain range is 540 km), and it covers an area of 17,900 km2. On the south-east side of the mountain there is a steep cliff up to 15 km high.>>
North is to the upper left. This image was created from PIA00323 by cropping and sharpening. NASA's description of the uncropped image is as follows: The eruption of Pele on Jupiter's moon Io. The volcanic plume rises 300 kilometers above the surface in an umbrella-like shape. The plume fallout covers an area the size of Alaska. The vent is a dark spot just north of the triangular-shaped plateau (right center). To the left, the surface is covered by colorful lava flows rich in sulfur.[/quote]