Europa
Jupiter II
Europa Facts
- Europa is the sixth of Jupiter's known satellites
and the fourth largest:
- distance from Jupiter: 670,900 km
- diameter: 3138 km
- mass: 4.80e22 kg
Europa is the second of the Galilean moons.
- Pronounced "yoo ROH puh".
- Europa
was a Phoenician princess abducted to Crete by Zeus,
who had assumed the form of a white bull, and
by him the mother of Minos.
- Discovered by Galileo
and Marius in 1610.
- Europa is slightly smaller than the Moon.
- Europa and Io are somewhat
similar in bulk composition to the
terrestrial planets: primarily composed of
silicate rock.
However, Europa's density (2.97 g/cm3, a little less than
the
Moon's and substantially less than Earth's)
indicates the lack of a dense iron core.
- But Europa's surface is not at all like anything in the inner solar system.
It is exceedingly smooth: no features more than a few hundred meters high
have been seen. The prominent markings seem to be only
albedo features.
- There seem to be very few craters on Europa; only three
craters larger than 5 km in diameter have been found
(picture 3).
This would seem to indicate a young and
active surface.
However, the Voyagers mapped only a
fraction of the surface at high resolution.
The precise age of Europa's surface is an open question.
- The images of Europa's surface stronly resemble images of sea ice on Earth.
It is possible that beneath Europa's surface ice there is a layer of
liquid water, perhaps as much as 50 km deep.
If so, it would be the only place in the solar system besides
Earth where liquid water exists in significant quantities.
- Europa's most striking aspect is a series of dark streaks
crisscrossing the entire globe (picture 1, above). They may
be due to freezing and expansion of the underlying water layer. But
the total area of the streaks is too large for that to be the whole story.
- Recent observations with HST reveal that
Europa has a very tenuous atmosphere (1e-11 bar) composed of oxygen. Of the 61
moons in the solar system only three others (Io,
Titan and Triton have
atmospheres. Unlike the oxygen in Earth's atmosphere,
Europa's is of not of biologic origin. It is generated by sunlight and
charged particles hitting Europa's icy surface producing water vapor which
is subsequently split into hydrogen and oxygen. The hydrogen escapes leaving
the oxygen.
- The Voyagers didn't get a very good look at Europa. But it is a principal focus
of the Galileo mission.
Pictures
- (above) Europa in Color
112k gif;
54k jpg
- Europa South Pole
70k gif;
36k jpg
- Europa close up
593k gif
- Europa from a distance
39k gif
- Europa with Narrow Angle Camera (Blue filter)
350k gif
- Europa with Narrow Angle Camera (Violet filter)
430k gif
- Europa with Narrow Angle Camera (Violet filter)
205k gif
- Another view of Europa
27k jpg
More about Europa
Open Issues
- How thick is the surface ice? Is there liquid water below?
- What are the surface streaks? How were they formed?
- Why is the surface so smooth?
- Is Europa being heated by tidal friction like Io? How much?
Is there any volcanism, perhaps hidden beneath the ice?
- The possible presence of liquid water and volcanism on Europa puts it on
my list of possible life-bearing bodies,
though, of course, the probability is very low.
... Jupiter
... Io
... Europa
... Ganymede
...
Bill Arnett; last updated:
1996 July 11