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Titanic volcanic eruption seen on Io [Photos r too cool for school]
The new scientist ^
| 11/14/02
Posted on 11/14/2002 3:32:44 PM PST by 1bigdictator
Titanic volcanic eruption seen on Io
14:50 14 November 02
NewScientist.com news service
A titanic volcanic eruption has been spotted on the surface of Jupiter's volatile moon Io using a telescope back on Earth. Astronomers believe it to be the most powerful eruption ever witnessed in the entire Solar System.... [see link for photos].
(Excerpt) Read more at newscientist.com ...
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KEYWORDS: allyourgigawatts; arebelongtous; crevolist; io
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To: 1bigdictator
"The volcano is far more powerful than any eruption recorded by scientists on Earth, with an estimated power output of about 78,000 gigawatts. By comparison, the power produced by the last significant eruption of Mount Etna in Italy in 1992 was just 12 gigawatts." Wow ... we are talking some serious energy released on that little moon!
To: GaltMeister
Something of that magnitude on Earth would probably lead to total extinction of all life... or at least another long ice age.
To: 1bigdictator
To: perfect stranger
It's a giant ZIT!
5
posted on
11/14/2002 4:10:21 PM PST
by
rmlew
To: 1bigdictator
The reason this is too kool is that it was imaged with a ground-based telescope. Keck II on Hawaii with adaptive optics. Io used to be either a dot in the big telescope or a satellite image. New stuff.
To: Sabertooth
ping-you like this sort of thing, right?
Cool.
7
posted on
11/14/2002 4:16:55 PM PST
by
sarasmom
To: GaltMeister
"The volcano is far more powerful than any eruption recorded by scientists on Earth, with an estimated power output of about 78,000 gigawatts. By comparison, the power produced by the last significant eruption of Mount Etna in Italy in 1992 was just 12 gigawatts."
How many gigawatts did it take for the flux capacitor to power the DeLorean back to the future? Was it 1.2 gigawatts?
8
posted on
11/14/2002 4:37:27 PM PST
by
aruanan
To: 1bigdictator
||| Something of that magnitude on Earth would probably lead to total extinction of all life... or at least another long ice age |||
Worse than that, the FR server would definitely go down =-(
9
posted on
11/14/2002 4:43:06 PM PST
by
fone
To: rmlew
Hilliary has gas
To: GaltMeister
I don't know if IO has an atmosphere or not but this could cause some major global warming.
To: aruanan
That would be 1.21 gigawatts
12
posted on
11/14/2002 4:49:53 PM PST
by
krizzy
To: perfect stranger
It looks to me like a meteor impacting the surface rather than a volcano erupting. You can see the black ejecta around the impact point where the hot lava is left behind.
To: germanicus
I don't know if IO has an atmosphere or not but this could cause some major global warming. Uh-Oh ... we better not let AlBore find out about this, or there's hell to pay...
To: 1bigdictator
Titanic volcanic eruption seen on IoWomen, minorities, and black monoliths hit hardest.
To: Hillarys Gate Cult
This looks series. Poor little Io, so close to Jupiter, so much grabitational tension!
16
posted on
11/14/2002 5:17:30 PM PST
by
MHGinTN
To: RightWhale
...adaptive optics...By what it's called, I assume it's done in real-time (and done physically). I have audio software that removes noise (by first sampling the noise by itself and then removing it from the signal) but it's "after the fact".
Can you explain to a layman like myself how adaptive optics work? Seems Herculean to me.
To: FreedomCalls
Dictionary.com-
" e·jec·ta Pronunciation Key (-jkt) pl.n. Ejected matter, as that from an erupting volcano."
I see your point and raise you the credibility of the source.
To: Senator Pardek
It is really on the edge of technology. The mirror is segmented in several parts, each piece is mounted separately and can be aligned separately under automatic control. This can be used to cancel out atmospherics such as heat waves. Small telescopes have better resolution for their size because of atmospherics, and this system is essentially several smaller telescopes together. Net result, small aperture resolution with large aperature light gathering capability.
To: krizzy
Thanks!
20
posted on
11/14/2002 6:17:20 PM PST
by
aruanan
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