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Artist's concept of a view across a pool of lava on the surface of Io, towards Jupiter.

WMY100031S | © Walter Myers / Stocktrek Images, Inc.

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Photo of Artist's concept of a view across a pool of lava on the surface of Io, towards Jupiter.

Description:
Artist's concept of a dormant volcanic caldera as it re-awakens with a surge of new lava that breaks up and melts a frozen crust. A gibbous Jupiter hangs over the horizon. There are places on Io where molten lava has been observed actively welling up from beneath the surface of this otherwise frozen world. Lavas on Io were originally thought to be molten sulfur, but with caldera temperatures far exceeding 1,000å¼ F--too hot for liquid sulfur--these eruptions are now thought to be primarily molten silicate rocks. How does a small satellite like Io, so far from the Sun, get so hot? The heat probably comes from tidal (gravitational) interactions between Io, Jupiter, and Io's sister satellites Europa and Ganymede. Like Earth's Moon, Io always keeps the same side facing its host planet. However, the gravitational pulls of Europa and Ganymede orbiting further out from Jupiter conspire to twist Io away from this orientation. This twisting stretches and bends Io by as much as 300 feet, generating an enormous amount of internal heat from friction. This heat is expressed as volcanic upwellings and geysers.