Tuesday, August 20, 2024

The Large Moon of Ganymede of Jupiter has more water than earth does inside it

I think it is frozen because of the distance from the Sun. However, Ganymede could be another piece of the planet Maldek that left Maldek when it got nuked by a war on that planet 65 million years ago. Another piece of Maldek hit earth then and killed all the larger land dinosaurs mostly through starvation and freezing to death through the nuclear winter type of event it created. Another possibility is that they also died (the closer ones to the Yucatan event) from nuclear radiation as well when the Asteroid from Maldek hit the Yucatan Peninsula in Mexico then. 

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GANYMEDE

Moon
Ganymede, a satellite of Jupiter, is the largest and most massive of the Solar System's moons. The ninth-largest object of the Solar System, it is the largest without a substantial atmosphere. Wikipedia

partial quote from above wikipedia article:

Ganymede, or Jupiter III, is the largest and most massive natural satellite of Jupiter and in the Solar System. It is the largest Solar System object without a substantial atmosphere, despite being the only moon in the Solar System with a substantial magnetic field. Like Titan, Saturn's largest moon, it is larger than the planet Mercury, but has somewhat less surface gravity than Mercury, Io, or the Moon due to its lower density compared to the three.[18]

Ganymede is composed of silicate rock and water in approximately equal proportions. It is a fully differentiated body with an iron-rich, liquid core, and an internal ocean that potentially contains more water than all of Earth's oceans combined.[19][20][21][22] Its surface is composed of two main types of terrain.

The first of the two main surface types are the lighter regions, which are generally crosscut by extensive grooves and ridges, dating from slightly less than 4 billion years ago. They cover about two-thirds of Ganymede. The cause of the light terrain's disrupted geology is not fully known, but it is speculated that this may be the result of tectonic activity due to tidal heating. Next are the dark regions that cover about a third of Ganymede. These dark regions are saturated with impact craters and are dated to four billion years ago.[9] Ganymede orbits Jupiter in roughly seven days and is in a 1:2:4 orbital resonance with the moons Europa and Io, respectively.

Possessing a metallic core, it has the lowest moment of inertia factor of any solid body in the Solar System. Ganymede's magnetic field is probably created by convection within its liquid iron core, also created by Jupiter's tidal forces.[23] The meager magnetic field is buried within Jupiter's far larger magnetic field and would show only as a local perturbation of the field lines. Ganymede has a thin oxygen atmosphere that includes O, O2, and possibly O3 (ozone).[17] Atomic hydrogen is a minor atmospheric constituent. Whether Ganymede has an ionosphere associated with its atmosphere is unresolved.[24]

Ganymede's discovery is credited to Simon Marius and Galileo Galilei, who both observed it in 1610,[2][g] as the third of the Galilean moons, the first group of objects discovered orbiting another planet.[26] Its name was soon suggested by astronomer Simon Marius, after the mythological Ganymede, a Trojan prince desired by Zeus (the Greek counterpart of Jupiter), who carried him off to be the cupbearer of the gods.[27] Beginning with Pioneer 10, several spacecraft have explored Ganymede.[28] The Voyager probes, Voyager 1 and Voyager 2, refined measurements of its size, while Galileo discovered its underground ocean and magnetic field. The next planned mission to the Jovian system is the European Space Agency's Jupiter Icy Moon Explorer (JUICE), which was launched in 2023.[29] After flybys of all three icy Galilean moons, it is planned to enter orbit around Ganymede.[30]

Size comparison of Earth, the Moon (top left), and Ganymede (bottom left)

History

Chinese astronomical records report that in 365 BC, Gan De detected what might have been a moon of Jupiter, probably Ganymede, with the naked eye.[31] However, Gan De reported the color of the companion as reddish, which is puzzling since moons are too faint for their color to be perceived with the naked eye.[32] Shi Shen and Gan De together made fairly accurate observations of the five major planets.[33][34]

On January 7, 1610, Galileo Galilei used a telescope



 




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