Volcanic Activity on Io at the Time of the Ulysses Encounter
- 11 September 1992
- journal article
- other
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 257 (5076) , 1507-1510
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.257.5076.1507
Abstract
The population of heavy ions in lo's torus is ultimately derived from lo volcanism. Groundbased infrared observations of lo between October 1991 and March 1992, contemporaneous with the 8 February 1992 Ulysses observations of the lo torus, show that volcanic thermal emission was at the low end of the normal range at all lo longitudes during this period. In particular, the dominant hot spot Loki was quiescent. Resolved images show that there were at least four hot spots on lo's Jupiter-facing hemisphere, including Loki and a long-lived spot on the leading hemisphere (Kanehekili), of comparable 3.5-micrometer brightness but higher temperature.Keywords
This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- Discovery of hotspots on Io using disk-resolved infrared imagingNature, 1990
- Infrared polarization measurements of Io in 1986The Astronomical Journal, 1988
- Infrared observations of eclipses of Io, its thermophysical parameters, and the thermal radiation of the Loki volcano and environsIcarus, 1988
- Infrared Speckle Observations of Io: An Eruption in the Loki RegionScience, 1985
- Io: The near-infrared monitoring program, 1979–1981Icarus, 1983