205 lines
12 KiB
Forth
205 lines
12 KiB
Forth
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FACT SHEET: VOYAGER JUPITER SCIENCE SUMMARY
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NASA launched the two Voyager spacecraft to Jupiter,
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Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune in the late summer of 1977. Voyager
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1's closest approach to Jupiter occurred March 5, 1979. Voyager
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2's closest approach was July 9, 1979.
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Photography of Jupiter began in January 1979, when
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images of the brightly banded planet already exceeded the best
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taken from Earth. Voyager 1 completed its Jupiter encounter in
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early April, after taking almost 19,000 pictures and many other
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scientific measurements. Voyager 2 picked up the baton in late
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April and its encounter continued into August. They took more
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than 33,000 pictures of Jupiter and its five major satellites.
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Although astronomers had studied Jupiter from Earth for
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several centuries, scientists were surprised by many of Voyager 1
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and 2's findings. They now understand that important physical,
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geological, and atmospheric processes go on - in the planet, its
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satellites, and magnetosphere - that were new to observers.
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Discovery of active volcanism on the satellite Io was
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probably the greatest surprise. It was the first time active
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volcanoes had been seen on another body in the solar system. It
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appears that activity on Io affects the entire Jovian system. Io
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appears to be the primary source of matter that pervades the
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Jovian magnetosphere -- the region of space that surrounds the
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planet, primarily influenced by the planet's strong magnetic
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field. Sulfur, oxygen, and sodium, apparently erupted by Io'svolcanoes and sputtered off the surface by impact of high-energy
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particles, were detected at the outer edge of the magnetosphere.
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Particles of the same material are present inside Io's
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orbit, where they accelerate to more than 10 percent of the speed
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of light. It is clear to scientists from a comparison of data
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from Pioneers 10 and 11 (which flew past Jupiter in late 1973 and
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1974) and the Voyagers that something changed in the four and
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one-half years between the Pioneer and Voyager encounters.
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It is not entirely clear just how far-reaching those
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changes are, or what brought them about. They may be related to
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Ionian activity. It is difficult to imagine, however, that at
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least some of Io's volcanoes were not erupting when the Pioneers
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flew past; it is also, the Voyager scientists say, difficult to
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believe the Pioneers' instruments failed to see magnetospheric
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concentrations of sulfur detected by both Voyager spacecraft
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(Voyager 1 saw greater concentrations than Voyager 2).
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Here is a summary of the more important science results
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from the Voyager encounters with Jupiter:
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JUPITER'S ATMOSPHERE
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Atmospheric features of broadly different sizes appear
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to move with uniform velocities. That suggests that mass motion
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(movement of material) and not wave motion (movement of energy
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through a relatively stationary mass) was being observed.
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Rapid brightening of features in the atmosphere was
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followed by spreading of cloud material. That is probably the
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result of disturbances that trigger convective (upwelling and
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downwelling) activity.
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A pattern of east-to-west winds extends as far poleward
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as 60 degrees north and south, roughly similar to the pattern
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seen in more temperate areas where belts and zones are visible.
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Previous investigations led scientists to believe the near-polar
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regions (above 45 degrees latitude) are dominated by convective
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upwelling and downwelling. Voyager showed they apparently are
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not, at least up to 60 degrees latitude, and probably to 75.
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Material associated with the Great Red Spot, Jupiter's
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most prominent atmospheric feature, moves in a counter-clockwise
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(anticyclonic) direction. At the outer edge, material appears to
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rotate in four to six days; near the center, motions are small
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and nearly random in direction.
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Small spots appear to interact with the Great Red Spot
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and with each other.
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Voyager instruments observed auroral emissions, similar
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to Earth's northern lights, in the polar regions, in ultraviolet
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and visible light. Pioneer 10 and 11 didn't see the ultraviolet
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emissions during their encounters. The auroral emissions appear
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to be related to material from Io that spirals along magnetic
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field lines to fall into Jupiter's atmosphere.
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Voyager also saw cloud-top lightning bolts, similar to
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superbolts in Earth's high atmosphere.
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Atmospheric temperature at 5 to 10 millibars (1/200th
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to 1/100th Earth's surface atmospheric pressure) is about 160
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Kelvins (-170 degrees Fahrenheit). An inversion layer -- a warmregion above a cold layer, similar to the phenomenon that traps
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smog in the Los Angeles Basin -- exists near the 150-millibar
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level. (Pressure at Earth's surface is about 1,000 millibars.)
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The Voyagers observed ionospheric temperatures that
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changed with altitude, reaching about 1,100 Kelvins (1,500
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degrees Fahrenheit). That was also not observed by Pioneers 10
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and 11, and Voyager scientists believe they are witnessing large
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temporal or spatial changes in the ionosphere of Jupiter.
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The Voyagers measured helium in the upper atmosphere;
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its percentage compared to hydrogen is important to understand
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composition and history of the atmosphere -- and the primordial
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cloud of which the Sun and planets formed. Relative abundance of
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helium to hydrogen is about 11 percent by volume.
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SATELLITES AND RING
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Voyager 1 identified nine currently active (erupting)
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volcanoes on Io, probably driven by tidal heating. Many more are
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suspected. Voyager 2 observed eight of the nine; the largest
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shut down by the time Voyager 2 arrived at Jupiter. Plumes from
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the volcanoes reach more than 300 kilometers (190 miles) above
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the surface. The material was being ejected at velocities up to
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1.05 kilometers a second (2,300 miles an hour). By comparison,
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ejection velocities at Mount Etna, one of Earth's most explosive
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volcanoes, hit 50 meters a second (112 miles an hour). Volcanism
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is associated with heating of Io by tidal pumping. Europa and
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Ganymede, two large satellites nearby, perturb Io in its orbit
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and Jupiter pulls Io back again. The pumping action causes tidal
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bulging up to 100 meters (330 feet) on Io's surface, compared
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with typical tidal bulges on Earth of one meter (three feet).
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Voyager 1 measured the temperature of a large hot spot
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on Io associated with a volcanic feature. While the surrounding
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terrain has a temperature of about 130 Kelvins (-230 degrees
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Fahrenheit), the hot spot's temperature is about 290 Kelvins (60
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degrees Fahrenheit). Scientists believe the hot spot may be a
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lava lake, although the temperature indicates the surface is not
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molten; it is, at least, reminiscent of lava lakes on Earth.
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Europa displayed a large number of intersecting linear
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features in the distant, low-resolution photos from Voyager 1.
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Scientists at first believed the features might be deep cracks,
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caused by crustal rifting or tectonic processes. Closer, high-
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resolution photos by Voyager 2, however, left scientists puzzled:
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The features were so lacking in topographic relief that they
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"might have been painted on with a felt marker," one scientist
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commented. There is a possibility that Europa may be internally
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active due to tidal heating at a level one-tenth or less that of
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Io. Models of Europa's interior show that beneath a thin crust
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(5 kilometers or 3 miles) of water ice, Europa may have oceans as
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deep as 50 kilometers (30 miles) or more.
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Ganymede turned out to be the largest satellite in the
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solar system. Before the Voyager encounters, astronomers thought
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that Saturn's satellite, Titan, was the largest. Ground-based
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observations of Titan, of necessity, had included its substantial
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atmosphere. Voyager measurements of Ganymede showed it is largerthan Titan. Ganymede had two distinct terrain types --- cratered
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and grooved, telling scientists that Ganymede's entire, ice-rich
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crust has been under tension from global tectonic processes.
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Callisto has an ancient, heavily cratered crust, with
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remnant rings of enormous impact basins. The largest craters
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apparently were erased when the ice-laden crust flowed during
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geologic time; almost no topographic relief is apparent in ghost
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remnants of the impact basins, identifiable only by their light
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color and surrounding subdued rings of concentric ridges.
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Amalthea is elliptical: 270 kilometers (170 miles) by
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165 kilometers (105 miles) by 150 kilometers (95 miles). It is
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about 10 times larger than Mars' larger satellite, Phobos, and
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has 1,000 times the volume.
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Voyager discovered a ring around Jupiter. Its outer
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edge is 129,000 kilometers (80,000 miles) from the center of the
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planet, and, though the brightest portion is only about 6,000
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kilometers (4,000 miles) wide, ring material may extend another
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50,000 kilometers (30,000 miles) downward to the top of Jupiter's
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atmosphere. Evidence also suggests that diffuse ring material
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extends as far out as the orbit of Amalthea. The ring is no more
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than 30 kilometers (20 miles) thick. Thus Jupiter joins Saturn,
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Uranus, and Neptune as a ringed planet -- although each ring
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system is unique and distinct from the others.
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Two new satellites, Adrastea and Metis, only about 40
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kilometers (25 miles) in diameter, orbit just outside the ring.
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A third new satellite, Thebe, diameter about 80 kilometers (50
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miles), was discovered between the orbits of Amalthea and Io.
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MAGNETOSPHERE
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An electric current of 5 million amperes was detected
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in the flux tube that flows between Jupiter and Io, five times
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stronger than predicted. Voyager did not fly through the flux
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tube, as planned, since the stronger current had twisted the tube
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7,000 kilometers (4,300 miles) from the predicted location.
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The Voyagers saw ultraviolet emissions from doubly and
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triply ionized sulfur and doubly ionized oxygen. Pioneers 10 and
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11 did not detect them, so hot plasma evidently was not present
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in 1973 and 74. The sulfur comes from Io's volcanoes.
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Plasma-electron densities in some regions of the Io
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torus (an inner-tube-shaped ring of matter in the region of Io's
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orbit) exceeded 4,500 per cubic centimeter.
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A cold plasma, rotating with Jupiter, lies inside six
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Jupiter radii (430,000 kilometers or 270,000 miles) from the
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planet. Ions of sulfur, oxygen, and sulfur dioxide were found.
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High-energy trapped particles were also detected near
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Jupiter, with enhanced abundances of oxygen, sodium, and sulfur.
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Kilometric radio emissions were coming from Jupiter.
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The emissions, in the frequency range from 10 kilohertz to 1
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megahertz, may result from plasma oscillations in the Io torus.
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Plasma flows in the dayside outer magnetosphere; the
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plasma rotates with the planet every 10 hours.
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Voyager 1 saw evidence of a transition from closed
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magnetic field lines to a magnetotail on the antisolar side ofJupiter. Although such a magnetotail was never in serious doubt,
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its existence had not been confirmed before.
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Voyager 2 observations during its Jupiter-to-Saturn
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cruise showed the magnetotail extends at least to the orbit of
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Saturn, 650 million kilometers (400 million miles) away.
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Scientists interpreted whistler emissions as lightning
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whistlers in the atmosphere. Lightning was suspected, and it has
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been proven, from the emissions and detection of bolts; lightning
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is a major energy source for many activities on Jupiter.
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Voyager also measured radio spectral arcs (from about 1
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megahertz to more than 30 megahertz) in patterns that correlate
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with Jovian longitude.
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Both Voyagers continued on to encounters with Saturn.
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Voyager 1 is bound out of the solar system. Voyager 2 completed
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encounters with Uranus (in January 1986) and Neptune (in August
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1989). It is now also leaving the solar system.
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The next mission to Jupiter will be Galileo, launched
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in 1989. Galileo, an orbiter and an atmospheric probe, will
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continue the exploration of Jupiter begun by the Pioneers and
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continued by the Voyagers. Both the missions are managed for
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NASA by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
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#####
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5/7/90DB
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