Probe Shows Jupiter Moon 'Puking' Into Space 152
Tablizer writes "The New Horizons probe caught the moon Io in the act of 'barfing' into space. A five-frame sequence from the New Horizons probe captured a beautiful plume of ash from Io's Tvashtar volcano. "Snapped by the probe's Long Range Reconnaissance Imager (LORRI) as the spacecraft flew past Jupiter earlier this year, this first-ever "movie" of an Io plume clearly shows motion in the cloud of volcanic debris, which extends 330 kilometers (200 miles) above the moon's surface ... The appearance and motion of the plume is remarkably similar to an ornamental fountain on Earth, replicated on a gigantic scale.""
Dizzy (Score:5, Funny)
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I wonder if it's hang over is as terrible..
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Re:Dizzy (Score:5, Informative)
Io is heated continually by tidal friction, leaving its core molten and its surface full of lava lakes and the vents and calderas of active volcanoes. The tide raising force of Jupiter raises the surface of Io in some places by several meters.
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Io appears to be rotating. Look at the features as they move past where the light and dark meet (I know there's a word for this - ahh, terminator). You can see features moving across the terminator fairly quickly in this 8 minute film clip. Either the light source is moving or the moon is rotating.
Am I missing something? Or is it merely that the rotation has little effect on wha
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That song suddenly took a dark turn.
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It's not something
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That's why you are posting here.
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The Mac users who have "earned their apples" (and thus can call themselves "real Mac users") knew MacOS from the time it was called System and have a consciously, but never gratuitious, rebellious attitude inherited from those who preferred Apple IIs to CP/M and, later, IBM PC-lookalikes. Those usually have a good sense of humour. They are also in their late 30
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You know... There _are_ people around who really don't want to know much about computers and don't particularly enjoy playing with them - they just need them to work properly. Most of them end-up using Windows because they don't care what an OS is, because their corporate m
So... (Score:5, Funny)
"Puking" and "barfing"? (Score:5, Insightful)
I mean, was that really necessary? Or is the story not interesting enough itself without toilet humor?
don't mind him (Score:2)
Re:"Puking" and "barfing"? (Score:5, Funny)
Wait.. Maybe that comment wasn't what you were looking for
Re:"Puking" and "barfing"? (Score:5, Funny)
"Whooa dude, that Io's like, err, like, err, barfing dude! - hehhehhhehehehhehhe"
"shwoaaah yeah, it's puking man! - kewl! - ehherrheehhheheh"
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You assume that other nations don't like having a little word-play fun. Getting into college and reading for enjoyment are two different things.
And frankly, critizing the US education motivation is somewhat unfair because becomming a business owner or biz manager pays so much more *compared to* science and math in the US that there is far more motivation in those countries to focus on sci-math in the schools: they don't have the options we
would an american submitter (Score:3, Insightful)
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Re:"Puking" and "barfing"? (Score:5, Insightful)
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I agree that this was just gratuitous. My favorite part is that the submitter put "barfing" into quotation marks, as if it wasn't his word. My second favorite part is that the use of the word combined with the phrase "into space" implies that it is spewing matter beyond its sphere of influence. Watching the animated gif from TFA makes it seem (at least to me, IANAE (I am not an exogeologist)) that
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Yeah, me too. It'd be nice to be able to include a one-line comment explaining why you're voting no. Often there are reasonably interesting stories with poorly-written submissions. I vote no figuring someone else will submit the same story with a better write-up, but it would be better if I could somehow note that. (Such as on Wikipedia, where you can explain an edit.)
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Re:"Puking" and "barfing"? (Score:5, Insightful)
In what, second grade?
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This may be a bit too much pop-psych, but I can't help but wonder if the desire to trivialize awesome natural events like this, Beavis-and-Butthead-style, comes from fear. A volcano with a 200-mile-high plume is not really the sort of thing the human mind handles very easily. I mean, we know what it is, and we can look at the pretty pictures on our screen and ooh and aah, but the ca
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What rule says that titles and summaries must be verbatim?
I mean, was that really necessary? Or is the story not interesting enough itself without toilet humor?
It provides an interesting visual metaphor. Not everybody likes everything dry and clinical all the time. Otherwise, we wouldn't have overlord jokes.
-The Submitter- (but not the D
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Well since you insist, I for one welcome our cosmic regurgitating overlords.
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Not toilet humor. (Score:2, Funny)
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Not only that - but the pictures show... (Score:2)
Whoever named that feature the Trashtalk Volcano knew too much...
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Great terminology... (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Great terminology... (Score:4, Informative)
Venting is the traditional term [google.com]
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Re:Great terminology... (Score:4, Funny)
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Only if the moon moans in pleasure.
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Since when is Slashdot about science
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Huh? (Score:5, Insightful)
Puking into space? (Score:2, Funny)
Iota Omicron (IO) (Score:4, Funny)
How to punt as a columnist (Score:5, Funny)
Step 2: Add a purile, irrelevant adjective, one that will set you apart from the pack.
Step 3: Write it up. Hello, interwebz. Let's move some ads!
Step 4: News aggregate sites filter out the best from all the... oh wait, here comes Zonk. Go, go Slashdot!
Step 5: Profit!
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"Potty mouthed" sounds like something a 3 year old might say.
In the end we will eventually discover (Score:1, Offtopic)
Puking? (Score:2, Funny)
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Too much space mead?
Offtopic? When the submitter uses "barf" and "puke" to describe astrophysical phenomena, offtopic no longer has any meaning.
..0.o..
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To bring this post back "on topic," allow me to submit the latest findings about the Big Black Hole [space.com] at the center of our galaxy, or as the original submitter might refer to it, the "Goatse Nebula."
Incidentally, "space mead" was a great Cthulhu reference. Mod parent up or something unspeakable will eat you.
Shit, my Cthulhu looks like the guy on the Pringles can. Mod m
My God... (Score:4, Funny)
Amazing pics (Score:3, Interesting)
Considering the distance it's a real neat proof of excellent space ship engineering.
Looking at the hight to which the venting reaches this is one hell of a volcano!
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I have read elsewhere that the Volcanoes on Io are probably no bigger than a hot spring geyser on Earth. The plume goes up a long way because of the very thin atmosphere and low gravity.
Even so, given the energy cost of getting there and the amount of radiation in the environment around it this moon is going to be unfinished business for the next 500 years or so.
Re:Amazing pics (Score:5, Informative)
"Boosaule Mons, which at 18 kilometers (11 miles) is the highest mountain on Io and one of the highest mountains in the solar system, pokes above the edge of the disk on the right side."
You might have read this...
"Unlike most moons, Io has a "young" surface. Because there is so much volcanic activity, the surface is almost free of craters. Also, its volcanoes are quite unusual. Instead of erupting like a normal volcano, they erupt more like geysers do on earth."
"Io has lots of thermal areas just like Yellowstone," says JPL's Bill Smythe. "The volcanic plumes get most of the attention but there are probably also things like fumeroles and geysers. On a previous flyby the Particles and Fields instruments saw a deficit of energetic particles over Io where gas was probably coming out of the surface -- but no plumes were seen. We call this the 'stealth plume hypothesis.' The closest Earthly analog to what's happening would be a water geyser like Old Faithful. In fact, if you put Old Faithful on Io it would be about 37 km high!"
"the cloud of volcanic debris, which extends 330 kilometers (200 miles) above the moon's surface. Only the upper part of the plume is visible from this vantage point - the plume's source is 130 kilometers (80 miles) below the edge of Io's disk, on the far side of the moon."
Volcanoes on Io are rather different in general from their Earth cousins. From Wikipedia...
"Io's surface is dotted with volcanic depressions known as paterae. Paterae generally have flat floors bounded by steep walls. These features resemble terrestrial calderas, but it is unknown if they are produced through collapse over an emptied lava chamber as with their terrestrial cousins. One hypothesis suggests that these features are produced through the exhumation of volcanic sills, with the overlying material either being blasted out or integrated into the sill. Unlike similar features on Earth and Mars, these depressions generally do not lie at the peak of shield volcanoes and are normally larger, with an average diameter of 41 km (25½ mi), the largest being Loki Patera at 202 km (125½ mi)."
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"Io has lots of thermal areas just like Yellowstone," says JPL's Bill Smythe. "The volcanic plumes get most of the attention but there are probably also things like fumeroles and geysers. On a previous flyby the Particles and Fields instruments saw a deficit of energetic particles over Io where gas was probably coming out of the surface -- but no plumes were seen. We call this the 'stealth plume hypothesis.' The clo
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Well... (Score:2, Funny)
Rovers and such (Score:1, Interesting)
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The Planetary Society privately funded a solar sail experiment. Unfortunately, the rocket exploded during launch. But they did select launchers on price instead of reliability (aging Soviet military equip.), so I guess its a case of you get what you pay for.
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Global warming (Score:1)
Direction of spout (Score:2, Interesting)
puking, barfing... (Score:1)
For a science that's so concerned about nomenclature (i.e. Pluto) how does puking or barfing even get used by a writer?
Viking snapped this too (1979) (Score:2)
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Mea culpa (Score:2)
Somehow I had it in my head that it was Viking. I remember seeing the pictures in National Geographic at the time - I'm sure the Io volcano was a cover image.
mass (Score:1)
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Do you think it's being ejected at escape velocity? It looks to me like it's falling back down.
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Most of it, but not all. The resolution is not high enough to show matter escaping into space.
Keep in mind that Jupiter's ring is made of, and is replenished by, Io's volcanic ejecta.
Someone further up the thread said this event was created by something more similar to a geyser than a volcano. Imagine standing on the surface of Io, as you would on Yellowstone, watching this baby from, let's say, half a kilometer. A stream shooting into space and arching in filam
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Great image sequence, poor wording (Score:1)
Subject (Score:1, Flamebait)
Mods: s/Flamebait/Insightful/ (Score:2)
It could be worse... (Score:2)
Really "Into Space", colorful wording aside (Score:2)
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The limiting factor of the space probes that took the photos would be CURRENT TECHNOLOGY.
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Actually, it's 2005 technology... (The launch was January 2006, so it must have been built in 2005.)
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There are several reasons. The camera has to be capable of surviving in deep space, the bandwidth is limited, the light level isn't that good and the probe takes several years to get to Jupiter.
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Now, because there's no suspended material (smoke), the amout of light the plume reflects is determined purely by the
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In other news: NASA scientists detected a belligerent Titan stepping on Superman's cape, and generally messing around with Jim.