Thursday, July 4, 2024
HomescienceNASA's Juno probe spies plumes above lava lakes on Jupiter

NASA’s Juno probe spies plumes above lava lakes on Jupiter

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picture: NASA/JPL-Caltech/SwRI/MSSS Image processing by Andrea Luck (CC BY)

It’s not a relatively large moon compared to some of its neighbours, but Jupiter’s moon Io is very active, with hundreds of volcanoes spewing lava plumes tens of miles Above its surface, according to NASA. Infrared technology aboard the space agency’s Juno probe mapped two such eruptions in February, bringing back valuable data about mysterious events beneath Io’s surface. The researchers shared their views on this issue in paper Published last week.

From a distance of about 2,400 miles, the probe’s JIRAM (Jovian Infrared Auroral Mapper) instrument “revealed that Io’s entire surface is covered in lakes of lava that lie in caldera-like features,” explained Alessandro Moura, one of the Juno project’s co-investigators from the National Institute of Astrophysics. in Rome. On Earth, a caldera is a crater formed by the collapse of a volcano. Io is a quarter the size of Earth in diameter, and slightly larger than Earth’s moon.

“In the area of ​​Io’s surface where we have the most complete data, we estimate that about 3 percent of it is covered by one of these magma lakes,” Mora said. Juno’s JIRAM instrument came from the Italian space agency Agenzia Spaziale Italiana.

Researchers model movement of lava lake on Io

According to Mora, lead author of the Io paper, the probe’s flyby reveals the most common type of volcanism on Jupiter’s hottest moon — “enormous lakes of lava where magma rises up and down.”

He added: “The lava crust is forced to break off the lake walls, forming the typical lava ring that appears in lava lakes in Hawaii.” The walls are likely to be hundreds of meters high, which explains why magma spills are generally not observed.

Researchers are still studying data collected by Juno-Io flybys, which occurred in February 2024 and December 2023.

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