Galileo Views Io Eruption
Io's surface is active.
Geyser-like eruptions from volcanoes on this Jovian moon were seen by
both Voyager spacecraft in 1979 and were also spotted this year in
late June by Galileo's camera from a distance of about 600,000 miles.
The blue plume seen at the moon's edge (magnified in the inset)
arises from Ra Patera, a large shield volcano, and extends about
60 miles above the surface. The blue color is attributed to
condensing and freezing sulfur dioxide gas.
Galileo images have also revealed that the plume glows in the dark -
perhaps due to fluorescence of excited sulfur and oxygen ions.
Io's surface is cold, its temperature averages about -230
degrees Fahrenheit,
so why is it so active?
The most likely cause is the
gravitational tug of war over Io between Jupiter and the other Galilean
moons which perturbs Io's orbit.
The orbital changes would result in tidal force variations
heating Io's interior and and generating the sulfurous
volcanic activity.