ASTR 121 (O'CONNELL)

SELECTED EUROPA IMAGES: AN EXTRATERRESTRIAL BIOSPHERE?




Europa, the second Galilean satellite of Jupiter, is now regarded as one of the best candidate biospheres in the solar system because of the evidence for large amounts of liquid water beneath its icy outer crust. Here are some recent images of Europa from the Galileo Mission.

For general information on Jupiter and the Galilean satellites, see Study Guide 20.


Europa cracks

Surface of Europa

The surface of Europa is covered with ice. By comparison to most terrestrial planets or satellites, it is extraordinarily smooth. Closeup images like this one show that the surface is probably a relatively thin layer of ice overlying an ocean. The blue here is ice, and the red lines are probably cracks, colored by a thin coating of darker material possibly ejected by ice volcanoes that occur along the cracks.



Europa Ice Rafts

Ice Rafts on Europa

View of a small region of the thin, disrupted, ice crust in the Conamara region of Jupiter's moon Europa showing the interplay of surface color with ice structures. The white and blue colors outline areas that have been blanketed by a fine dust of ice particles ejected at the time of formation of the large (26 kilometer in diameter) crater Pwyll some 1000 kilometers to the south. A few small craters of less than 500 meters or 547 yards in diameter can be seen associated with these regions. These were probably formed, at the same time as the blanketing occured, by large, intact, blocks of ice thrown up in the impact explosion that formed Pwyll. The unblanketed surface has a reddish brown color that has been painted by mineral contaminents carried and spread by water vapor released from below the crust when it was disrupted. The original color of the icy surface was probably a deep blue color seen in large areas elsewhere on the moon. The colors in this picture have been enhanced for visibility.

North is to the top of the picture and the sun illuminates the surface from the right. The image, centered at 9 degrees north latitude and 274 degrees west longitude, covers an area approximately 70 by 30 kilometers (44 by 19 miles), and combines data taken by the Solid State Imaging (CCD) system on NASA's Galileo spacecraft during three of its orbits through the Jovian system. Low resolution color (violet, green, and infrared) data acquired in September 1996, were combined with medium resolution images from December 1996, to produce synthetic color images. These were then combined with a high resolution mosaic of images acquired on February 20th, 1997 at a resolution of 54 meters (59 yards) per picture element and at a range of 5340 kilometers (3320 miles).




Europa Cliffs

Ice Cliffs on Europa

This image, taken by the camera onboard NASA's Galileo spacecraft, is a very high resolution view of the Conamara Chaos region on Jupiter's moon Europa. It shows an area where icy plates have been broken apart and moved around laterally. The top of this image is dominated by corrugated plateaus ending in icy cliffs over a hundred meters (a few hundred feet) high. Debris piled at the base of the cliffs can be resolved down to blocks the size of a house. A fracture that runs horizontally across and just below the center of the Europa image is about the width of a freeway. North is to the top right of the image, and the sun illuminates the surface from the east. The image is centered at approximately 9 degrees north latitude and 274 degrees west longitude. The image covers an area approximately 1.7 kilometers by 4 kilometers (1 mile by 2.5 miles). The resolution is 9 meters (30 feet) per picture element. This image was taken on December 16, 1997 at a range of 900 kilometers (540 miles) by Galileo's solid state imaging system.




Images and captions courtesy of NASA/Galileo Project and the University of Arizona.



Last modified 3 May 1998 by rwo


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