Researchers from the Juno mission have finally solved a mystery that has puzzled scientists for over four decades.
New measurements from NASA's Juno probe have seemingly put to bed the possibility of a magma ocean beneath the surface of Io.
Hundreds of volcanoes and lava lakes on Jupiter’s moon Io are likely powered in the same way as Earth’s volcanoes.
Scientists with the Juno mission to Jupiter have discovered that the volcanoes on Jupiter’s moon Io are each likely powered ...
Io's volcanic activity explained without magma ocean evidence Tidal heating powers volcanic eruptions on Jupiter's moon ...
Nasa has revealed new details about Io, Jupiter’s third-largest moon and the most volcanic world in our solar system.Io has ...
Io does not have a shallow global magma ocean beneath its surface, counter to previous claims, suggests a paper published in ...
Io, roughly the size of Earth's Moon, is home to approximately 400 volcanoes that continuously erupt, contributing to its ...
Observations made of Jupiter’s moon Io during the Juno mission’s flybys helped astronomers confirm how and why Io became the ...
If the planet has a liquid ocean underneath, its yellow crust caked in sulfur, it will be more squishable compared to a more ...
Io, discovered by Galileo Galilei in 1610, is the most volcanic body in our solar system. NASA's Juno spacecraft continues to ...