GeminiFocus October 2014 | Page 7

Observatory atop Hawaii’s Mauna Kea (long dormant) volcano to target the atmosphere of Uranus. When she finished, de Pater decided to take brief images of Io in anticipation of our team beginning a program to monitor Io in the near-infrared at the Gemini North telescope and NASA’s Infrared Telescope Facility (IRTF), also located on Mauna Kea. The Keck images revealed a pair of incredibly bright eruptions near Io’s south pole. These events fall into the rare “outburst” class of Ionian volcanoes. They represent the hottest and most energetic volcanic activity on the moon but are typically seen only once every year or two. Both the Gemini N and IRTF telescopes scheduled follow-up observations through Director’s Discretionary Time in the subsequent days to watch the events evolve. The first follow-up observations, made simultaneously at the IRTF and Gemini North telescopes, revealed something unexpected and even more incredible: a third eruption, far from the site of the previous ones. This new event was both brighter and more powerful than the initial pair combined. Figure 1 shows images at multiple wavelengths from the Keck detection of the first two eruptions on August 15th alongside the Gemini detection on August 29th of the third. Looking into Earth’s Distant Past Volcanism is one of the few processes linking the hidden interior of a planet with the observable exterior. It is therefore one of the few ways of learning about what’s happening inside planets. The question of Io’s dominant magma composition is still unanswered, but is important for understanding how Io’s interior translates tidal forcing into volcanic eruptions. Does Io erupt basaltic lavas similar to those we see on Earth (at Hawaii’s Kilauea volcano, for example), or is the magma composition different? By determining the peak temperatures reached by volcanic eruptions, we can constrain which minerals might exist in melt form. Basaltic magmas erupt at a temperature near 1475 Kelvin (K). Higher temperatures could indicate runnier magnesium-rich magmas of an ultramafic composition that require a higher internal heat to melt, such as Earth had when it first formed. Figure 2. Observations of the August 29th volcanic outburst on Io over a two-week period. The star indicates the outburst site; other smaller-scale events are also visible. Figure adapted from de Kleer et al., 2014. Over the following two weeks, Gemini scheduled near-nightly imaging of Io to follow the course of the third eruption (Figure 2); the first three of which were conducted simultaneously with the IRTF. These near-daily observations, utilizing a combination of Gemini’s adaptive optics and the spectral information from the IRTF data, gave us unprecedented coverage of this rare event. October 2014 GeminiFocus 5