Galileo's Flyby of Almathea
An anonymous reader writes "The spectacular Galileo flybys of Jupiter, Europa and Io are largely credited with the discovery of frozen water ice and some of the earliest examples of non-solar (tidal) heating anywhere in our solar system. For the next 10 days, Galileo scientists are preparing for their next target: probing one of Jupiter's moons, Almathea, at the close-up range of 100 miles. Almathea is one of the most unusual moons in the solar system, because it gives off more heat than it receives from the Sun."
Lisa, In this house we obey the laws of thermodynamics.
Yes i know there are other explainations
And NASA releases a picture of the Intel Inside logo on the surface...
LETS DECOMPOSE & ENJOY ASSEMBLING
I mean, that's the only explanation I can come up with. Ours just...you know, sits there. We go there once, get bored and come back. So we spend our time looking at other planets' moons instead of making it back to ours. I mean really. Give our moon some lubbin'!
Zech Harvey, MCSE, MCDBA, CCNA
For those of us who aren't very much at home in astronomy and it's terms and who just want to see (relatively) pretty pictures; Celestia also has Almathea available for your viewing pleasure, along with allot of different stuff in our solar system and even beyond there. Besides, it's a pretty proggy... :)
Hate me!
Sorry, I needed that rant.
Cheers!
Haven't you read the Hitchhiker's Guide? Flying is easy. All you have to do is throw yourself at the ground and miss.
Star Pirates
Did Galileo find a Black Monolith yet?
Hell, has nobody noticed that the real name is Amalthea?
Where are your classics!?
She was the goat that nurtured baby Zeus = Jupiter!
The Correct spelling is Amalthea.
It says so on the JPL's website.
Also Amalthea was a nymph that nursed Jupiter in mythology. This fits in with the naming of the other moons.
It looks like it was only misspelled once on the astrobio site which may be the cause of the confusion.
Ursula Andress, Catherine Deneuve, and Charo, twice...
While I strongly support looking for close in objects, it's not like it's an either/or situation. The world has lots of astronomers (and other kinds of scientists as well). We also have resources sufficient to do research into a wide variety of astronomical phenomena.
Those of us who have actually done some political work in support of looking for earth approaching asteroids only ask for a few millions of dollars to finance such work. Focusing all of our attention on nearby objects would be foolish and wasteful in the extreme.
"Beer is proof God loves us and wants us to be happy." -- B. Franklin
Probes are the way to go, its just a pity that for every one sent few manage to survive the trip, the payoff is so great.
Jupiter is so heavy that it's inner reigions are incredibly hot - some think it's actually a star that just wasn't big enough to have it's own mass crush it's innards to the point where nuclear fusion occurs and the star is born. It's big enough, though, that the innards are squished to to superheat. It's this heat from the inside that makes Jupiter warm up.
The moon's heating is accounted for by tidal forces - Jupiter is just so flippin' MASSIVE that it's gravity stretches and squeezes the moon, and these tidal forces make it heat up.
The surface of Amalthea (sp.?) will be interesting to look at. I think it will have pronounced cracks on the surface where aeons of tidal forces have had their way.
All these moon are belong to you.
Except Europa. Europa are belong to us.
You have no chance to survive, make your time.
Move "Discovery"! For great monolith!
Hmm, I think must've seen the Japanese translation...
Actually, Triton (Neptune's largest) does, too, IIRC. All the gas giants do as well.
In Amalthea's case (as well as Europa and Io), the moon is constantly being contracted and stretched by Jupiter's gravity, and those tidal forces generate heat in the moon's core. You can duplicate this effect by squeezing a piece of styrofoam in your hand and feeling it heat up.
Of course, all the gas giants have internal heat sources due to the immense gravity in their highly contracted solid cores. Neptune gives off way more heat and light than it receives from the Sun.
THE GOOD HUMOR MAN CAN ONLY BE PUSHED SO FAR
Bart Simpson on chalkboard in episode 2F18
Celestia is a 3D space simulator much like OpenUniverse. It's avaible for both Windows and *nix OSes. In it, you can view all the planets, some moons, asteroids, and a fair number of stars. Here's a shot of Almathea. They release add-ons every now and then-- you can even download the recently discovered Quaoar!
"To confine our attention to terrestrial matters would be to limit the human spirit." -Stephen Hawking