MEDIA RELATIONS OFFICE
JET PROPULSION LABORATORY
CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND SPACE ADMINISTRATION
PASADENA, CALIF. 91109 TELEPHONE (818) 354-5011
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov
Contact: Jane Platt
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
June 4, 1998
GALILEO MISSION FINDS STRANGE INTERIOR OF JOVIAN MOON
New data from NASA's Galileo spacecraft have prompted
scientists to modify their concept of the interior structure of
Jupiter's moon, Callisto, and suggest that Callisto has evolved
differently than the other largest Jovian moons -- Io, Ganymede
and Europa. The new findings, to be published in the journal
Science on Friday, June 5, will be presented Monday, June 8 at
the American Astronomical Society meeting in San Diego, CA.
"Previous Galileo data had indicated that Callisto's
interior was totally undifferentiated," said Dr. John Anderson,
planetary scientist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory,
Pasadena, CA. "But new information suggests Callisto has a
strange interior--it's not completely uniform nor does it vary
dramatically. There are signs that interior materials, most
likely compressed ice and rock, have settled partially, with the
percentage of rock increasing toward the center of Callisto."
The new information was collected during Galileo's third
Callisto encounter in September 1997. Anderson reported on the
findings, along with UCLA geophysics and planetary physics
professor Gerald Schubert, a Galileo gravity investigator, and
Dr. William B. Moore, also of UCLA; and Dr. Robert A. Jacobson,
Eunice L. Lau, and William L. Sjogren of JPL.
Scientists now believe Callisto is different from Io,
Ganymede and Europa, which have differentiated structures with
separated layers. There is strong evidence that Ganymede is
separated into a metallic core, rock mantle, and ice-rich outer
shell, while Io has a metallic core and a rock mantle but no ice.
"The fact that Callisto is the only one of the four large
Jovian moons that is not completely differentiated raises an
intriguing possibility," said Schubert. "Because Io, Ganymede
and Europa are closer to Jupiter, they have been more affected by
gravitational squeezing and subsequent heating. Over time, the
forces exerted on the three inner moons have caused different
constituents such as water ice, rock, and metal to separate into
different layers. However, because Callisto is farther from
Jupiter, it is "half-baked" compared to the other moons, with its
ingredients somewhat separated but still largely mixed together,"
he said.
"Learning about the structure of these celestial bodies
enhances our knowledge of how all planets and moons form and
evolve, including our own Earth and Moon," Schubert added.
Scientists had previously reported a differentiated interior
for Europa, consisting of a metallic core surrounded by a rock
mantle and a water ice-liquid outer shell. They are now refining
the model by studying the newest Galileo data, including that
gathered during the closest-ever Europa flyby in December 1997,
at an altitude of 205 kilometers (127 miles). Europa's metallic
core could be up to half the size of the moon's radius, with the
water ice-liquid shell estimated to be between 80 to 170
kilometers thick (50 to 106 miles), with 100 km (62 miles)
considered the most likely thickness. As more data become
available from additional flybys, scientists hope to learn more
about Europa's structure. Europa is of particular interest
because of the prospect that liquid oceans may lie beneath its
icy crust.
Information about the interior structure of Jupiter's moons
is obtained by studying radio Doppler data that is gathered when
the Galileo spacecraft flies by the satellites. Each moon exerts
a gravitational tug, and the strength of that tug is affected by
the distribution of rock inside. The tug, in turn, changes the
spacecraft's speed and the radio frequency of its signals. By
studying those changes, scientists can characterize the rock
content and structure of the body.
The Galileo spacecraft entered orbit around Jupiter on
December 7, 1995, and spent two years studying Jupiter, its four
largest moons and its magnetosphere during its primary mission.
The spacecraft is now in the midst of a two-year extension, known
as the Galileo Europa Mission. JPL manages the Galileo
mission for NASA's Office of Space Science, Washington, D.C. JPL
is a division of the California Institute of Technology,
Pasadena, CA.
Additional information about the Galileo mission and images
sent back by the spacecraft is available on the Internet at:
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/galileo/.
Images are also available at: http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov .
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