The north polar region of Jupiter’s volcanic moon Io
was captured by NASA’s Juno during the spacecraft’s 57th close pass of the gas
giant on Dec. 30, 2023. Data from recent flybys is helping scientists
understand Io’s interior.
Image data: NASA/JPL-Caltech/SwRI/MSSS
Image processing by Gerald Eichstädt
A new study points to why, and how, Io became the most volcanic body in the
solar system.
Scientists with NASA’s Juno mission
to Jupiter have discovered that the volcanoes on Jupiter’s moon Io are each
likely powered by their own chamber of roiling hot magma rather than an ocean
of magma. The finding solves a 44-year-old mystery about the subsurface origins
of the moon’s most demonstrative geologic features.
A paper on the source of Io’s volcanism was published on Thursday, Dec. 12, in the
journal Nature, and the findings, as well as other Io science results, were
discussed during a media briefing in Washington at the American Geophysical
Union’s annual meeting, the country’s largest gathering of Earth and space
scientists.
About the size of Earth’s Moon, Io is known as the most volcanically active body in our solar system. The moon is home to an estimated 400 volcanoes, which blast lava and plumes in seemingly continuous eruptions that contribute to the coating on its surface.
This animated tour of Jupiter’s fiery moon Io,
based on data collected by NASA’s Juno mission, shows volcanic plumes, a view
of lava on the surface, and the moon’s internal structure.
NASA/JPL-Caltech/SwRI/Koji Kuramura/Gerald Eichstädt
Although the moon was discovered by
Galileo Galilei on Jan. 8, 1610, volcanic activity there wasn’t discovered
until 1979, when imaging scientist Linda Morabito of NASA’s Jet Propulsion
Laboratory in Southern California first identified a volcanic plume in an image from the agency’s Voyager
1 spacecraft.
“Since Morabito’s discovery,
planetary scientists have wondered how the volcanoes were fed from the lava
underneath the surface,” said Scott Bolton, Juno principal investigator from
the Southwest Research Institute in San Antonio. “Was there a shallow ocean of
white-hot magma fueling the volcanoes, or was their source more localized? We
knew data from Juno’s two very close flybys could give us some insights on how
this tortured moon actually worked.”
The Juno spacecraft made extremely close flybys of Io in December 2023 and February 2024, getting within about 930 miles (1,500 kilometers) of its pizza-faced surface. During the close approaches, Juno communicated with NASA’s Deep Space Network, acquiring high-precision, dual-frequency Doppler data, which was used to measure Io’s gravity by tracking how it affected the spacecraft’s acceleration. What the mission learned about the moon’s gravity from those flybys led to the new paper by revealing more details about the effects of a phenomenon called tidal flexing.
This five-frame sequence shows a giant plume erupting
from Io’s Tvashtar volcano, extending 200 miles (330 kilometers) above the
fiery moon’s surface. It was captured over an eight-minute period by NASA’s New
Horizons mission as the spacecraft flew by Jupiter in 2007.
NASA/Johns Hopkins APL/SwRI
Prince of Jovian Tides
Io is extremely close to mammoth
Jupiter, and its elliptical orbit whips it around the gas giant once every 42.5
hours. As the distance varies, so does Jupiter’s gravitational pull, which
leads to the moon being relentlessly squeezed. The result: an extreme case of
tidal flexing — friction from tidal forces that generates internal heat.
“This constant flexing creates
immense energy, which literally melts portions of Io’s interior,” said Bolton.
“If Io has a global magma ocean, we knew the signature of its tidal deformation
would be much larger than a more rigid, mostly solid interior. Thus, depending
on the results from Juno’s probing of Io’s gravity field, we would be able to
tell if a global magma ocean was hiding beneath its surface.”
The Juno team compared Doppler data
from their two flybys with observations from the agency’s previous missions to
the Jovian system and from ground telescopes. They found tidal deformation
consistent with Io not having a shallow global magma ocean.
“Juno’s discovery that tidal forces
do not always create global magma oceans does more than prompt us to rethink
what we know about Io’s interior,” said lead author Ryan Park, a Juno
co-investigator and supervisor of the Solar System Dynamics Group at JPL. “It
has implications for our understanding of other moons, such as Enceladus and
Europa, and even exoplanets and super-Earths. Our new findings provide an
opportunity to rethink what we know about planetary formation and evolution.”
There’s more science on the horizon. The spacecraft made its 66th science flyby over Jupiter’s mysterious cloud tops on Nov. 24. Its next close approach to the gas giant will occur 12:22 a.m. EST, Dec. 27. At the time of perijove, when Juno’s orbit is closest to the planet’s center, the spacecraft will be about 2,175 miles (3,500 kilometers) above Jupiter’s cloud tops and will have logged 645.7 million miles (1.039 billion kilometers) since entering the gas giant’s orbit in 2016.
By: Jet Propulsion
Laboratory
Source: NASA’s Juno Mission Uncovers Heart of Jovian Moon’s Volcanic Rage - NASA
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