Hello Io, From Galileo 18
FortKnox writes: "This afternoon super-durable Galileo will swoop in on the south pole of Io. Scientists hope to learn a little more about the volcanic moon of Jupiter. And it shows some great NASA innovation in the little probe still working great (although low on fuel). Fly-by will happen at 3:23pm EST."
Magnetic field? (Score:4, Informative)
Last time Galileo tried this, it suffered a glitch just prior to closest approach. The magnetometer was turned out late in the restart sequence (which was probably a poor decision), so we didn't get the data two years ago. (This fly-by has been dubbed the 'cry-by' by several researchers I know.)
Let's just hold the poor, battered warrior survives this one.
How do you tell the difference? (Score:3, Interesting)
As i recall, if a body is magnetic (induced or otherwise) it will look the same from the outside. Perhaps that is why they want a close flyby to be able to monitor small changes near the surface.
If anyone knows how you can distinguish between an intrinsic and an induced magnetic field, please step forward and explain.
Yours Yazeran
Plan: To go to Mars one day with a hammer.
Re:How do you tell the difference? (Score:2)
So, why the hammer?
--
Evan
Re:How do you tell the difference? (Score:1)
Yazeran.
Re:How do you tell the difference? (Score:2)
Well, now, not if you went to Mars. :) You'd be a... ummm... exogeologist would be too generic. Martian geologist is too wordy. Arieologist? Marteologist? Ariegeologist?
Can you imagine the formations on a low grav, low temp world? Both the immense ones and the formations of microscopic crystals? I'd play photographer... --
Evan "Lunologist? Seleogist?" E.
Re:How do you tell the difference? (Score:1)
I think the term would be: areologist.
Re:How do you tell the difference? (Score:1)
Hello Io? (Score:2, Funny)
When NASA gets it right.... (Score:3, Insightful)
I could go on and on about the good things NASA has done - the Deep Space mission, NEAR, etc. But of course these don't get as much press as when a mission goes wrong. The media has created in the mind of the public the irrational desire for perfection - we want it to work 100% the first time. But when pusing the frontiers of science, sometimes things break.
Goodbye, IO (Score:2, Interesting)
NASA's Galileo spacecraft successfully completed [nasa.gov] a close flyby to study Jupiter's moon Io at 0123 Universal Time today (6:23 p.m. Oct. 15, Pacific Daylight Time), during the long-lived spacecraft's 32nd orbit around Jupiter.
Galileo passed closer to Io than ever before, within about 181 kilometers (112 miles) of ground level near Io's south pole.