|
MEDIA RELATIONS OFFICE
JET PROPULSION LABORATORY
CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND SPACE ADMINISTRATION
PASADENA, CALIFORNIA 91109 TELEPHONE (818) 354-5011
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov
Contact: Guy Webster (818) 354-6278
Spacecraft to Fly Over Source of Recent Polar Eruption on Io
NASA's Galileo spacecraft will buzz the north pole of Jupiter's
moon Io early next week to get unprecedented magnetic
measurements and examine the site of a dramatic recent volcanic
eruption.
The durable robot will skim about 200 kilometers (124 miles)
above Io's surface at 9:59 p.m. Aug. 5, Pacific Daylight Time
(12:59 a.m. Aug. 6, EDT). A few seconds later, Galileo will
speed over an area that was belching a giant plume of volcanic
gases seven months ago. The spacecraft will be flying at a
lower altitude than the top of the plume, creating the
possibility that Galileo will fly right through a volcanic
plume for the first time.
"Plumes in the polar regions of Io appear to be infrequent
and short-lived, so we don't know whether this one will still
be there or not," said Dr. Eilene Theilig, Galileo project manager
at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.
The Galileo flight team at JPL chose the polar path of
this flyby because magnetic readings above the pole might
reveal whether Io generates a surrounding magnetic field of its
own, like the magnetic field around Earth. Determining that
would add to understanding of Io's hot interior, said Dr.
Torrence Johnson, Galileo project scientist at JPL.
"All of our previous magnetic measurements at Io have been
on equatorial passes, and from those we can't tell whether the
field at Io is induced by Jupiter's strong magnetic field or
produced by Io itself," Johnson said. Polar measurements may
give enough additional information to distinguish between those
two possibilities.
As a side benefit, the path will take Galileo directly over
a dynamic volcano named Tvashtar. In November 1999, Galileo
imaged an active "curtain of fire" eruption at Tvashtar. The
volcano was hurling magma more than 1.5 kilometers (1 mile)
high. The eruption had become much less violent and had shifted
to a different part of Tvashtar by Galileo's next flyby, three
months later. Then, a tenuous gas plume from Tvashtar was
discovered from images taken by Galileo and by NASA's Cassini
spacecraft within a few days of when Cassini passed Jupiter
on its way toward Saturn on Dec. 30, 2000. The plume rose as
much as 385 kilometers (239 miles) high. Where sulfurous
material from it fell back to the surface, it created a red
ring about 1,400 kilometers (870 miles) in diameter.
If the plume is still active and the same size, Galileo will
fly through about the top quarter of it. The project's
scientists and engineers estimate that at that altitude the
plume material is very thin gas without particles large enough
to penetrate the spacecraft.
Whether the plume is active or not, Galileo will look for
changes in the Tvashtar region. "We'll be trying to figure out
just where the plume erupted from," Johnson said.
As Galileo passes Io, it will be out of communication with
Earth. NASA's Deep Space Network, which provides the
communication link for interplanetary spacecraft, has a large
antenna temporarily out of service in Spain, the only one of
the network's three sites that will have Jupiter in view above
it during the flyby. The antenna is being upgraded to help
handle an increased number of missions that will need
communications in 2003 and 2004. Confirmation of Galileo's
status during the flyby will not be received until several
hours afterwards. Images and other data from the flyby will
be returned gradually over the following two months.
Io is the innermost of Jupiter's four largest moons. Heat
from tidal flexing powered by Jupiter's gravitational pull
makes it the most volcanically active world in the solar system,
with an estimated 200 to 300 volcanoes rapidly resurfacing it.
Galileo has been orbiting Jupiter in elongated loops since 1995.
Four of its previous 31 close flybys of Jupiter's moons have
been by Io. It will swing near Io twice more after next week,
once in October and again in January, then near the small inner
moon Amalthea once before a mission-ending plunge into the
crushing pressure of Jupiter's atmosphere in 2003. Galileo's
mission was originally scheduled to end in 1997, but has been
extended three times to take advantage of the spacecraft's
durability.
The orbiter has survived more than three times the cumulative
radiation exposure it was designed to withstand. Some electronic
components have been affected by the radiation, and each loop
near Jupiter increases the odds of more serious damage from
exposure to the radiation belts around the planet, Theilig said.
Engineers have developed some new strategies for attempting to
minimize the loss of images caused by an intermittent problem
that has affected Galileo's camera since last summer.
JPL, a division of the California Institute of Technology in
Pasadena, manages Galileo for NASA's Office of Space Science,
Washington, D.C. Additional information about the mission is
available online at
http://galileo.jpl.nasa.gov .
# # # # #
Note to Broadcasters: A video file to accompany this release
will air on NASA Television on Aug. 2 and Aug. 3 at noon,
3 p.m., 6 p.m., 9 p.m. and midnight, EDT. NASA-TV is broadcast
on GE-2, transponder 9C, located at 85 degrees West longitude.
The frequency is 3880.0 MHz. Polarization is vertical. Audio is
monaural at 6.8 MHz. For general questions about the NASA
Video File, contact Fred Brown, NASA Television, Washington,
D.C. (202) 358-0713.
|