Posted on 08/03/2013 10:20:09 PM PDT by SunkenCiv
Explanation: Like the downtown area of your favorite city and any self-respecting web site ... Io's surface is constantly under construction. This moon of Jupiter holds the distinction of being the Solar System's most volcanically active body -- its bizarre looking surface continuously formed and reformed by lava flows. Generated using 1996 data from NASA's Galileo spacecraft, this high resolution composite image is centered on the side of Io that always faces away from Jupiter. It has been enhanced to emphasize Io's surface brightness and color variations, revealing features as small as 1.5 miles across. The notable absence of impact craters suggests that the entire surface is covered with new volcanic deposits much more rapidly than craters are created. What drives this volcanic powerhouse? A likely energy source is the changing gravitational tides caused by Jupiter and the other Galilean moons as Io orbits the massive gas giant planet. Heating Io's interior, the pumping tides would generate the sulfurous volcanic activity.
(Excerpt) Read more at 129.164.179.22 ...
[Credit: Galileo Project, JPL, NASA]
I think I see Obama’s birth certificate.
Close up of a zit.
All these worlds are yours except Europa ping.
Moldy cheese.
[elephant lips? LMAO]
It’s amazing those moons don’t get sucked into Jupiter just by sheer force of gravity.
Them Ioians must be tough bunch :)
What a miracle all our lives are. Grab those you love and don’t let go. Love them. Make your every moment count.
Something I just learned, and it’s right on Wikipedia, is that all this tidal heating of Io and Europa is due to the stable interlocked orbits of Io, Europa, and Ganymede, with periods in the ratio 1:2:4 . ( Callisto is far enough away not to be locked in, and is effectively a “loner” . )
Any one of these moons, alone, would settle into a fixed circular orbit without any variable tidal forces, but all together they constantly tug each other back and forth in a stable but dissipative pattern.
Well, it makes sense to me!
Never, ever play pull my finger with someone from Io.
Wikipedia is amazing for what you learn. I learned there that the singer formerly known as Terence Trent D’Arby breaks wind uncontrollably at the sight of monkeys. Good thing Io doesn’t look like a monkey.
They will someday. The two moons of Mars, Phobos and Demos will crash into the planet eventually as well.
Gotcha! Jupiter Turned Comet into a Moon
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/chat/2339448/posts
Location Made Twin Moons Different [Ganymede, Callisto]
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/chat/2438961/posts
Probe spies moon’s volcanic plume (Jupiter’s moon, Io)
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/chat/1793158/posts
and wth:
Saturn’s sixtieth moon discovered
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/chat/1869432/posts
No, they won’t. Two of Jupiter’s prograde moons will:
http://www.seasky.org/solar-system/jupiter-moons.html
The retrograde moons and numerous retrograde moonlets may eventually crash into Jupiter, or they may be ejected from the system.
Phobos will eventually crash into Mars, Deimos probably won’t. They must have been captured by Mars, but no one has come up with the math to satisfy everyone else working on the problem.
http://nineplanets.org/phobos.html
http://nineplanets.org/deimos.html
You’re juice saying that.
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