Jupiter Images - Satellites

Steven Dutch, Natural and Applied Sciences, University of Wisconsin - Green Bay First-time Visitors: Please visit Site Map and Disclaimer. Use "Back" to return here.


A computer montage of Jupiter and its four large (Galilean) satellites.
Images of the four Galilean satellites to the same scale. From upper left they are:
  • Callisto: 4810 km diameter, 1,883,000 km from Jupiter
  • Ganymede: 5270 km diameter, 1,070,000 km from Jupiter
  • Europa, 3130 km diameter 671,000 km from Jupiter
  • Io: 3640 km diameter, 422,000 km from Jupiter

Callisto

This is what everyone expected the Galilean Satellites to look like - bland, heavily cratered icy balls. In fact, Callisto is the most heavily cratered body in the solar system. This is about the last thing Voyager showed that matched anyone's preconceptions!
Callisto has the champion multiple-ring impact basin in the solar system. Called Valhalla, it has about 30 distinct rings.

Like many bodies in the outer solar system, Callisto is covered with a dark coating, literally as dark as soot. It's not fair - icy objects orbiting where the sunlight is dim ought to be bright - but that's how it is. The coating is so sooty that most planetary geologists think that's just what it is - not from combustion, but from solar ultraviolet and atomic particles stripping hydrogen atoms off organic molecules and leaving carbon. Why this stuff coats some objects but not others is a deep mystery.

Ganymede

Ganymede is the largest satellite in the solar system, beating Saturn's moon Titan by 120 km. This is a photomosaic (I have actually had people ask why Ganymede had jagged edges!).

Ganymede's icy crust seems to have fractured and drifted apart. Ganymede and Earth are the only two bodies where very large horizontal crustal movements have occurred, though the mechanisms are totally different. Ganymede does not have plate tectonics; its crustal movements are more akin to drifting of ice pack in the Arctic. Early in its history, Ganymede probably had an icy crust and a liquid interior.

Like Callisto, Ganymede has been darkened, and the darkening increases with age. Younger craters and crustal areas are lighter.

Europa

 
 
 
 

Io

 
 
 

Amalthea

Measuring 260 by 146 by 133 km, Amalthea was the only one of Jupiter's small moons to be photographed in any detail. It is about as big as an object can be before gravity deforms it into a round shape. One very large crater can be seen. The red coating is sulfur that escaped from Io.

Return to Planetary Images Index
Access Course Notes on Planetary Geology
Return to Professor Dutch's Home Page

Created 6 April 1999, Last Update 6 April 1999

Not an official UW Green Bay site