Transcript Europa

Europa
Anton Pires
Europa
• is the sixth moon of the planet
Jupiter, and the smallest of its
four Galilean satellites.
• DISCOVERY AND NAME
• Europa was discovered in 1610 by
Galileo Galilee.
• He used a 20x-power, refracting
telescope at the University of
Padua Italy.
• Europa was named similar to
all Galilee’s Satellites after
Greek mythology.
• Europa is named after a lover
of Zeus, the Greek counterpart
of Jupier. Europa is the ,
daughter of the king of Tyre.
Physical characteristics
• Roughly the size of earth's
moon
• Surface area
3.09 × 107 km2 (0.061
Earths)
• Volume 1.593 × 1010 km3
(0.015 Earths)
• Mass 4.80 × 1022 kg (0.008
Earths)
• Surface temp.
• min ~50 K
• mean 102 K
• max 125 K
At just over 3,100 kilometres (1,900 mi) in diameter, it is the sixth-largest
moon and fifteenth largest object in the Solar System.
Primarily composed of silicate rock.
•Silicate Rock – is a compound containing a silicon bearing anion. Silicates
comprise the majority of the earth’s crust, as well as most planets and moon’s.
Internal structure
•It is believed that Europa
has an outer layer of water
around 100 km (62 mi)
thick; some as frozen-ice
upper crust, some as liquid
ocean underneath the ice.
•magnetic field data from the
Galileo orbiter showed that
Europa has an induced
magnetic field through
interaction with Jupiter's.
(VIDEO EXAMPLE)
•Europa probably contains a
metallic iron core.
Surface Features
• Europa is one of the smoothest
objects in the Solar System
• There are few craters on Europa
because its surface is tectonically
active and young.
• the surface is about 20 to 180
million years old.
• The radiation level at the
surface of Europa is equivalent
to a dose of about 540 rem
(5400 mSv) per day, an amount
of radiation that would cause
illness in human beings.
Lineae
• surface features are a series of dark
streaks crisscrossing the entire globe,
called lineae.
• the edges of Europa's crust on either
side of the cracks have moved relative to
each other
• hypothesis states that these lineae may
have been produced by a series of
eruptions of warm ice as the Europan
crust spread open to expose warmer
layers beneath.The effect would have
been similar to that seen in the Earth's
oceanic ridges
Subsurface Oceans
•Most planetary scientists
believe that a layer of
liquid water exists beneath
Europa's surface, kept
warm by tidally generated
heat similar to earth.
•Average temperature
110 K (−160 °C; −260 °F)
•Equator 50 K (−220 °C;
−370 °F)
Atmosphere
• composed mostly of molecular oxygen
(O2 ).
• The surface pressure of Europa's
atmosphere is 10−12 times that of the
Earth.
• In 1997, the Galileo spacecraft confirmed
the presence of a tenuous ionosphere (an
upper-atmospheric layer of charged
particles) around Europa created by
solar radiation and energetic particles
from Jupiter's magnetosphere, providing
evidence of an atmosphere.
• Unlike the oxygen in Earth's
atmosphere, Europa's is not of
biological origins.
• The surface-bounded atmosphere
forms through radiolysis, the
dissociation of molecules through
radiation.
Video
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7vAUMS6Vt
Xo
Potential for
Extraterrestrial
life
• Europa's unlit interior is now
considered to be the most likely
location for extant extraterrestrial
life in the Solar System
• Life could exist in its under-ice
ocean, perhaps subsisting in an
environment similar to Earth's deepocean hydrothermal vents or the
Antarctic Lake Vostok. Life in such
an ocean could possibly be similar to
microbial life on Earth in the deep
ocean. So far, there is no evidence
that life exists on Europa.
• Galapagos ALVIN exploration.
Exploration
Pioneer 10 and Pioneer 11 were the first to visit Jupiter, in
1973 and 1974, respectively; the first photos of Jupiter's
largest moons produced by the Pioneers were fuzzy and dim.
The Voyager flybys followed in 1979, while the Galileo
mission orbited Jupiter for eight years beginning in 1995 and
provided the most detailed examination of the Galilean
moons that is expected until the end of the 2020s
Interesting Fact
• The Voyager probes
discovered three more
inner satellites in 1979,
so Europa is now
considered Jupiter's
sixth satellite, though it
is still sometimes
referred to as Jupiter II
Sources
•http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7vAUMS6VtXo
•http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Europa_(moon)
•http://www.nasa.gov/worldbook/europa_worldbook.html
•http://www.solarviews.com/eng/europa.htm