News Services
University of Arizona
Contacts:
Alfred S. McEwen, 520-621-4573, mcewen@pirlmail.lpl.arizona.edu
Elizabeth Turtle, 520-621-8284, turtle@lpl.arizona.edu
Paul Geissler, 520-621-621-2114, geissler@pirlmail.lpl.arizona.edu
Jani Radebaugh, 520-621-1632, jani@lpl.arizona.edu
18 May 2000
Galileo's sharp new pictures of Io detail amazing volcanism
By Lori Stiles
(EDITORS: For images, go to the Planetary Imaging Research Laboratory
- Galileo web page: PIRL/Galileo,
http://pirlwww.lpl.arizona.edu/~turtle/Releases/Releases.19_May_2000.html)
When the Galileo spacecraft flew close by Jupiter's moon, Io, late last
year and early this year, it took sharpest-ever pictures of the best volcanic
show in the solar system.
Galileo took more than 100 high-resolution images during Io flybys on
Oct. 11, Nov. 26 and Feb. 22. Results include pictures of an active lava
flow as long as the Grand Canyon, a mile-high curtain of burning lava,
a unique long-lived "wandering" volcanic plume, and a 6-mile-diameter
lava lake that shines steady as a beacon. The Galileo imaging team reports
the results in
the May 19 issue of Science.
"Io is absolutely fascinating because every single thing we see is
completely new and completely unexpected," said Jani Radebaugh, a
graduate student at the University of Arizona who helps analyze the photographs.
"You can take what you know about volcanology and about planetary
processes, but in every picture we see, there's something new going on
that we don't understand. There's something brand new, every time."
"Io is like a laboratory for large-scale volcanic experiments,"
said Alfred S. McEwen of the Galileo imaging team. McEwen directs the
Planetary Imaging Research Laboratory (PIRL) at the UA Lunar and Planetary
Lab (LPL). "We don't have controlled laboratories big enough to study
these processes. And large-scale volcanic fields on Earth are very modified.
So here's a place we can watch the changes and really understand how this
activity might happen at this scale. With that insight, we can go back
and reconsider what happened in Earth's past."
"I like Io as a model of what might be going on under the crust of
Europa," said Paul Geissler, senior research associate at LPL and
member of the Galileo imaging team. "The whole (jovian moon) system
is a great exercise in comparative planetology," Geissler said. "You
have four separate moons, separated at birth, and they've grown up completely
differently. So it's very
important to study them from that point of view."
The Galileo imaging scientists are trying to understand how Io's extraordinary
volcanism fits within the big geologic picture of the moon and the jovian
system. They'd like to discover the composition of Io's crust. They'd
like to know if Io's interior holds a magma ocean -- a question images
alone won't answer. They use Galileo to explore how volcanoes erupt and
modify the
landscape, what the lavas are made of, and how Io's strange terrain forms
and evolves.
Results discussed in the Science article include --
* Pele -- Pele is a very unusual volcano, even for Io, in that it consistently
shines brightly. The new images show it to be an active lava lake about
10 km (6 miles) across. Galileo imaging and spectral data show it must
be at least 1,030 degrees Celsius (1,890 Fahrenheit). Nighttime pictures
of Pele taken in October show a hot, glowing line at the margin of the
Pele caldera. The researchers interpret this line to be where molten lava
pushes against the caldera walls and is exposed, breaking through the
edges of the crust that covers the lava lake. (A caldera is a depression
that forms from collapse over a magma chamber.)
* Pillan -- New high-resolution images of Pillan Patera, show a complex
mix of pits, domes, channels and possibly rafted plates near a 70-km lava
flow that erupted in June 1997. Such channels and rafted plates form when
lava erupts at flow rates violent enough to destroy stable crust -- a
kind of volcanism also seen on Mars and Earth. But pits and domes, which
range in size from a few tens of meters to many hundreds of meters in
diameter, are harder to explain. Possibly, They are vents of plumes, analogous
to volcanic "rootless cones" on Earth.
The new images also reveal color properties of the dark diffuse deposits
around Pillan that provide the first evidence that silicate particles
are spewed more than 100 kilometers high in Io's plumes.
* Zamama -- The new images show the primary vent at the westernmost end
of the 100-km-long dark flow (roughly the length of Arizona's Grand Canyon)
with lava flows forming a radial pattern around the vent. The 75-km Zamama
plume comes not from the primary vent, but from the center of a lava field
extending to the east.
* Prometheus -- Prometheus is Io's most faithful, persistent plume. It
has been seen in every image of the area taken by Voyager, Galileo and
Hubble Space Telescope. Remarkably constant in size, shape and brightness
throughout its observed history, Prometheus had "wandered" between
75 to 95 km west in the 20 years between the 1979 Voyager flyby and the
1996
Galileo flyby. In 1996, Galileo also saw a new dark flow extending between
the Voyager-era and the Galileo-era plume sources.
McEwen and others on the Galileo imaging team had suggested that Prometheus
comes not from the primary vent, but from the end of a lava flow -- an
argument that some of their peers questioned. The new Galileo evidence
strengthens the UA researchers' case.
The latest Galileo images and spectra show two main hot spots. One is
15 km south of the caldera and marks where lava spews from a fissure to
the surface. The other hot spot, 80 km to the west, is where the 100-km-high
Prometheus plume rises above active lava beds.
"The new Io images pretty strongly confirm the view that the plume
comes from the lava flow, not the volcano," McEwen said. "But
that doesn't mean we understand it." Although Prometheus erupts at
10 times the rate of Kilauea, Earth's most active volcano, it in many
ways resembles Kilauea, only on a larger scale, McEwen said. However,
he added, "Prometheus' plume and its behavior is totally alien from
anything seen on Earth."
* Emakong Patera -- Emakong is one of the largest calderas on Io without
an observed "hot spot." It features a brightly colored surface
that may be sulfur lava flows. The images show that at some point lava
filled the entire 40-km diameter caldera and overflowed. This has happened
at a much smaller scale at Kilauea in Hawaii.
Emakong and many other calderas on Io are irregular in shape, rather than
circular, as are Earth's calderas, Radebaugh said."That tells us
there are interesting things going on underneath the surface of the crust.
There's probably fractures and some stresses that make those irregular
shapes when the surface collapses.
* Tvashtar Catena -- A lava "curtain", or line of lava fountains,
rises to 1.5 km above a linear fissure within one of the calderas. On
Io, as on Earth, lava erupting from a fissure can create a curtain of
fire along the fissure. But because Io's atmospheric pressure is a billion
times less than the Earth's, because Io's gravity is lower and its lava
is hotter, Io's lava fountains can
reach 100 times higher than those on Earth.
* Mountains and related landforms -- Researchers know of about 100 mountains
on Io that do not appear to be volcanoes. Io's mountains resemble tilted
blocks bounded by steep scarps, said LPL research associate Elizabeth
Turtle of the Galileo imaging team. The highest mountain known on Io is
16 km high, Turtle said. The new photos suggest an intriguing association
between mountains and calderas, which may help explain how both form,
she added.
The sharp new Galileo photos show that several mountains have calderas
cut into their sides. The photos also suggest that mountains and calderas
are geologically related in other ways. For example, Turtle said, rising
plumes of new material in Io's mantle may concentrate stresses acting
in Io's crust, causing it to fail, forming mountains by thrust faulting.
As the mountains are tilted up, layers of weak, sulfur-rich material deposited
by Io's plumes may fail, resulting in tremendous landslides.
From a mosaic of new pictures of the lava-filled depression called Hi'iaka
Patera and its two bordering mountains, UA graduate student Windy Jaeger
speculates that Io's crust there might have been laterally pulled apart.
It may be only coincidence that the north and south parts, if pushed together,
would fit together like pieces of a puzzle, Jaeger said. At this point,
evidence is only circumstantial.
But if Hi'iaka Patera was once pulled apart, McEwen said, "that would
be very surprising, because on Earth a movement on that scale is associated
with plate tectonics. But we see no evidence for plate tectonics on Io.
There again might be some unique Ionian process involved."