Refiner of Gold Creations'

Solar System -- Europa

Second Galilean Moon
of the Fifth Planet
EuropaAn "Icy Cueball" of a Moon
  • About the same size as earth's moon.
  • It is the second closest of these four to the planet.
  • Very smooth surface criss-crossed by long streaks.
  • Average distance from Jupiter is 671,000 km.
  • Rotation on axis is 3.6 days (Earth time).
  • Diameter is 3,130 km, or about 1,946 miles (slightly smaller than our moon).
  • Fourth largest satellite to Jupiter.
  • Surface composition mostly of water determined by Earthbound astronomers prior to 1979.
  • Brighter surface richer in ice than other Jovian satellites.
  • It's nearly featureless surface revealed by Voyager missions.
  • Faint surface markings and virtually no impact craters.
    • Markings appear as pale tan streaks with almost no relief.
    • Darkness of streaks only 10% more than surface,
    • Streaks barely visible; photos returned processed for contrast.
    • Resemble Percival Lowell's Martian "canals."
    • Streaks appear to be broad, shallow valleys with straight of curved paths across the plains of Europa.
    • They are about 5 to 70 kilometers (3 to 43 miles) across and as long as 3,000 kilometers (1,860 miles).
    • Brighter central strips appear on some, resembling flat valley floors.
    • Scientific study suggests these "valleys" can be no more than a few hundred meters deep.
  • Europa's surface is essentially ice.
  • The mean density of the interior is much greater than that of ice.
    • It is about that of silicate rocks, such as volcanic lavas on Earth or the moon.
    • Also indicates that Europa is composed mostly of rock.
    • Only a layer of ice covers the surface.
    • Ice may be as much as 100 km or 62 miles thick.
  • Large craters are absent from Europa's surface.
    • Only three craters are larger than 20 km or 12 miles across mapped.
    • Surface apparently does not date back to the era of intense cratering (4 to 4.5 billion years ago during planet formation).
    • Icy surface area believed to be less than 1 billion years old.
  • Shares similarities with Ganymede and Callisto:
    • Probably formed from a mixture of icy and rocky dust.
    • Probably formed in the cold, primordial cloud of debris orbiting newly formed Jupiter.
  • Europa received more heat, from two sources:
    • Radiant heat came from nearby proto-Jupiter.
    • Additional heat came from tidal flexing - the mechanism that causes the volcanoes on Io.
    • The heat melted portions of Europa's interior.
    • Watery "lava" erupted and coated the surface.
    • Calculations indicate that under current conditions, tidal heating may maintain a melted layer of liquid water under the surface ice.
    • This creates a sort of buried ocean.

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Refiner of Gold Creations
1998 Solar System Facts
Created by EMC on 6/23/1997. Updated 5/4/2005.