JUPITER'S MOONS   Fire and ice

Does Europa Have Life?

Jupiter’s orbit is well outside the Sun’s habitable zone, the “Goldilocks” region where temperatures could allow liquid water to exist on a world’s surface. Despite this, one of Jupiter’s moons, Europa, is considered a prime target in the search for current life in the Solar System, not life in the ancient past like Mars and Venus. Beneath its frigid surface, an icy crust 15-25 km (10-15 mi) thick, is an ocean 60-150 km (40-100 mi) deep, so vast that it’s bigger than all of Earth’s oceans combined. The water is salty and there is probably volcanic activity at the rocky bottom, an environment quite like the deep ocean hydrothermal vents on Earth where we see thriving ecosystems that require no sunlight. The Europa Clipper orbiter, launching in 2024, will investigate whether life is down there by measuring the thickness of the ice, the tectonic activity, and the depth and composition of the ocean. Read More

 

 

Latest News About Jupiter's Moons

 

An asteroid races toward the icy Jovian moon Europa with the gas giant planet in the background
A 'snowball fight' may help scientists find life on Jupiter's moon Europa

March 22, 2024

The sizes and shapes of craters could provide information about how thick its ice shell is Read more

This illustration shows charged particles from Jupiter impacting Europa’s surface, splitting frozen water molecules into oxygen and hydrogen molecules
Jupiter's moon Europa may have less oxygen than expected, a finding that might put a damper on life

March 4, 2024

Even with little or no oxygen, microbes might still be there Read more

Jupiter's moon Io, its night side illuminated by reflected sunlight from Jupiter, or 'Jupitershine'
The sharpest pictures of Jupiter’s volcanic moon Io in a generation

February 7, 2024

Juno made a second ultra-close flyby of Io just this week Read more

A montage of small moons
The coolest moons of Jupiter and Saturn you’ve never heard of

February 5, 2024

At least 290 moons have been discovered in our Solar System; 240 orbit Jupiter and Saturn Read more

Cracks across Europa's surface
NASA Juno spacecraft picks up hints of activity on Jupiter's icy moon Europa

January 25, 2024

The image shows an oddly-shaped area of the icy surface Read more

A view of Jupiter's moon Io captured by NASA's Juno spacecraft on December 30, 2023
NASA captures stunning images of Jupiter’s moon Io on closest flyby in 20 years

January 3, 2024

Juno was expected to be around 930 miles from the moon’s surface Read more

The little black dot (bottom middle) may be the first impact crater spotted on Io
We may have found a crater on Jupiter’s moon Io for the first time

December 18, 2023

Io is so volcanically active that any impact craters are rapidly covered up Read more

Could shallow lakes be locked away in Europa’s crust? Europa Clipper will find out
Europa Clipper could help discover if Jupiter's moon is habitable

December 4, 2023

Could shallow lakes be locked away in Europa’s crust? Europa Clipper will find out Read more

A map of 266 hot spots on Io made using data from NASA's Juno probe, identified in data obtained from March 2017 to July 2022
Jupiter's moon Io is covered in active volcanoes. Now we have the 1st map of them

November 16, 2023

"For the very first time, we have a global view of Io's ongoing volcanic activity" Read more

Photo of Jupiter's moon Ganymede
Evidence of alien life may exist in the fractures of icy moons around Jupiter and Saturn

November 8, 2023

The team looked at what are called "strike-slip faults" on Ganymede Read more

Ganymede imaged by Juno
Salts and organics observed on Ganymede’s surface by NASA’s Juno

October 30, 2023

Data collected indicate a briny past may be bubbling to the surface Read more

An image of Jupiter's volcanic moon Io as seen by NASA's Juno probe on Oct. 15, 2023
Jupiter's volcanic moon Io looks stunning in new Juno probe photos

October 18, 2023

The moon's tortured surface appears tie-dyed with swirls of light and dark Read more

NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope captured this image of Jupiter’s moon Europa that identifies where carbon dioxide, seen in white, was detected on the icy surface of Europa
Carbon discovered on Jupiter's moon Europa. Does it increase chances of finding life?

September 29, 2023

This confirms its subsurface ocean contains the chemicals needed for life Read more

An image of Callisto captured by the Voyager 1 probe
Jupiter's moon Callisto has a whole lot of oxygen scientists struggle to explain

September 13, 2023

A recent analysis finds up to 1,000 times more molecular oxygen than can be explained Read more

An illustration shows the Juno spacecraft flying past Io as Jupiter lurks in the background
JWST and Hubble will help NASA's Juno probe study Jupiter's volcanic moon Io

August 28, 2023

The telescopes will team up to assist the spacecraft the next time it flies by Read more

Io, in all of its volcanic glory
Juno shares stunning new images of Jupiter’s volcanic moon Io

August 11, 2023

Prometheus is known for its regular eruptions, nicknamed “Old Faithful of Io” Read more

Maps of Ganymede’s 3.5 μm H2O2 absorption compared to those of the 3.1 μm Fresnel peaks of water ice and corresponding projections of the U.S. Geological Survey Voyager-Galileo imaging mosaic
Hydrogen peroxide found on Jupiter's moon Ganymede in higher latitudes

July 24, 2023

It took a prior team studying data from the JWST to find it Read more

Colonies of B. subtilis grown on a culture dish in a molecular biology laboratory.
Bacterial spores may thrive on the icy moons of Jupiter and Saturn

July 18, 2023

Such bacteria may have first evolved on the warm seafloors of of Europa Read more

This illustration depicts the interior of Jupiter’s moon Europa, as scientists now understand it
Is Europa’s habitability limited by slow evolution?

June 27, 2023

The core is critical to the ability to support life because it relates to the interior heat Read more

Juno observed Jupiter's moon Io in visible and infrared light during a May 1, 2023 flyby, yielding this composite view showing hot spots across the surface of the solar system's most volcanically active world
See Jupiter's volcanic moon Io glow red-hot in incredible images

May 22, 2023

They reveal multiple hotspots of volcanic activity over the surface of the moon Read more

NASA’s Galileo spacecraft captured this image of the surface of Jupiter’s moon Ganymede
Icy moonquakes: Surface shaking could trigger landslides

April 14, 2023

They could be the source of mysteriously smooth terrain on moons of Jupiter Read more

Image composite of Jupiter, Io, Europa, Ganymede, and Callisto, with illustration of Juice spacecraft
ESA’s Juice lifts off on quest to discover secrets of Jupiter’s icy moons

April 14, 2023

Juice carries the dreams of anyone who’s ever gazed up at Jupiter Read more

A nascent, coruscant Jupiter may have vaporized water from the surfaces of its moons, Io (shown on the left) and Europa (right)
Baby Jupiter glowed so brightly it might have desiccated its moon

March 28, 2023

The findings could aid the search for icy moons orbiting exoplanets Read more

A view of Jupiter's moon Europa captured by NASA's Juno mission during its Sept. 29, 2022, close flyby at the moon
Jupiter moon Europa's buried ocean may alter rotation of its icy shell

March 16, 2023

Turbulent, swirling currents may influence the spin and geology of the moon Read more

Jupiter’s moon Io, as seen by the JunoCam instrument on Juno
Juno just snapped some of the best and clearest images of Io yet

March 5, 2023

Cleary, Io still looks like a pizza Read more

A crystal of a completely new type of salty ice that was previously unknown on Earth but could exist on icy moons in the solar system
Newly discovered type of salt could explain the mystery of Europa's ice cracks

February 23, 2023

It explains the red streaks that match no known substance on Earth Read more

Artist's concept of aurorae on Ganymede - auroral belt shifting may indicate a subsurface saline ocean.
All of Jupiter's large moons have auroras

February 20, 2023

They are deep red and almost 15 times brighter than the familiar green patterns we see on Earth Read more

An artist’s impression of Jupiter and its giant moon Ganymede. The latter is the primary target of the spacecraft JUICE, as well as the largest moon in the solar system and the only one to generate its own magnetic field
At Jupiter, JUICE and Clipper will work together in hunt for life

February 16, 2023

A soon-to-launch European mission is the first of two spacecraft Read more

This top-down diagram shows the orbits of moons around Jupiter: Purple denotes the Galilean moons, yellow for Themisto, blue for the Himalia group, cyan and green for Carpo and Valetudo, respectively, and red for far-out retrograde moons
Astronomers find a dozen more moons for Jupiter

January 31, 2023

The discovery of a dozen new moons for Jupiter makes the king of planets the king of moons, too — at least for now Read more

 

Io

Jupiter's Moon Io
The closest to Jupiter of its four large moons, Io is the most geologically active world in the Solar System. There are over 400 volcanoes, and at any given time about 100 of them are erupting, some spewing sulfur gas 300 km into space. Only slightly larger than Earth’s moon, it is too small to have enough energy for all this activity on its own. Instead, the interior is heated by friction caused by the continuous gravitational tugging and squeezing it experiences from Jupiter and two of the other large moons, Europa and Ganymede. These tidal forces cause Io’s solid surface to move up and down as much as 100 meters. The constant flow of fresh lava and raining down of ash on Io’s surface quickly covers and erases any impact craters, and temperatures are far too high for water, making it quite different from the other three Galilean Satellites.

Europa

Jupiter's Moon Europa
One of the most promising sites for life outside Earth, Europa is thought to have an iron core, a rock mantle, a liquid water layer up to 100 km thick containing twice as much water as all of Earth’s oceans, and a 20-km thick crust of ice. Spacecraft instruments have detected a magnetic field being induced inside Europa by Jupiter’s immense magnetic field, leading to the conclusion that the ocean conducts electricity and is therefore salty. Europa has an elliptical orbit so the magnitude of the gravity the moon feels from Jupiter varies as it orbits creating tides that pull at the moon’s icy crust, resulting in fractures in the surface. This flexing also has the potential to generate volcanic activity at the rocky bottom of the ocean, similar to hydrothermal vents at the bottom of Earth’s oceans, providing the thermal and chemical energy required to sustain life. The implications of habitability due to this volcanically active interface between Europa’s ocean and its rocky mantle is what makes it more exciting than oceans inside some other icy worlds.

Ganymede

Jupiter's Moon Ganymede
The largest moon in the Solar System, Ganymede is the only moon that has its own magnetic field. This creates a bubble, called a magnetosphere, within Jupiter’s own intense magnetic field that provides the moon some protection from the massive amounts of radiation the planet produces. The moon has three layers: an inner core of mostly iron; a rocky outer core; a thick mantle layer and outer crust dominated by water ice. It is hypothesized, based on data from spacecraft and laboratory experiments, that this mantle could be made of alternating layers of liquid and frozen water, plus some layers that are a slushy mixture of the two. Some models estimate the amount of liquid water inside Ganymede could be nearly six times the total ocean water on Earth, even greater than Europa. However, being farther from Jupiter, it’s unlikely that there is enough tidal energy from the planet’s gravity to produce the kind of hydrothermal activity thought to exist in Europa’s interior.

Callisto

Jupiter's Moon Callisto
Jupiter’s second largest moon and the farthest of the Galilean Satellites, Callisto has the oldest and most heavily cratered surface in the Solar System. The surface craters, the result of impacts with comets and asteroids, are still visible and fairly pristine, suggesting there has been very little geologic activity over the moon’s 4.5-billion-year history. Like Europa and Ganymede, it likely hosts an interior ocean, probably more than 200 km below the surface, but like Ganymede its distance from Jupiter means it is unlikely to have enough internal thermal energy to create a habitable environment in that ocean.

Other Moons

Jupiter's Small Moons
Jupiter has a total of 95 known moons, and other smaller and further ones may still remain undiscovered. Of the 91 smaller moons, the largest, Amalthea, measures only 250 km across on its longest axis, over 10 times smaller than Europa, the smallest of the Galileans. These small moons are irregularly-shaped objects made mostly of rock and ice, and are probably either leftovers from the formation of the large moons, the remains of a moon destroyed by a large impact, or captured asteroids from the nearby Main Asteroid Belt. Many of these moons still lack proper names, though there is an ongoing effort to select names for all of them.

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