Cham wrote:Thanks Andrea. Of course, the color is temporary and will be changed at the last stage. I'm wondering about that blue color we see almost everywhere on the web, for Io's plumes. Is that the real color ?
Well, even if I'm not a geologist, I well know that when solid it has a pale yellow or brown color, and when it is lighted emits a very intense blue light, so... Io eruptions are of liquid or lighted sulphur?
Considering that sulphur melts on Io at 177?°C, and the mean surface temperature is -143?°C, the blue light could be only due to sulphur reaching the Io surface already lighted.
But Ionian activities are very strange and still unclear, if we think that Galileo found Io surface temperatures up to 1500?°C, and that in this paper, from the Instituto de Astrophisica de Canarias
http://www.astroscu.unam.mx/rmaa/RMxAC. ... -luis2.pdf
many other aspects are submitted for investigation (silicates together with sulphur, unexplained temperatures, impossible to be reached taking into account only the tidal forces due to the very close Jupiter, etc.)
Fascinating, isn't it?
BTW, here is another movie (this time real, not a simulation) with Io's volcano erupting, with the usual blu color plume:
http://www.solarviews.com/raw/jup/vio2.mov
Bye
Andrea
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