Article 64VYS The view from a Galilean moon

The view from a Galilean moon

by
John
from John D. Cook on (#64VYS)

The Galilean moons are the four largest moons of Jupiter, first observed by Galileo, contra Stigler's law of eponymy.

This post shows what the Jovian system look like from the perspective of each of these moons, a sort of pre-Copernican perspective in a Jovian context.

The view from Io

Here's what Europa would look like from Io. The orbital period for Europa is very nearly twice the orbital period of Io.

io_europa.png

Here's what Ganymede would look like from Io. The orbital period of Ganymede is very nearly 4 times that of Io.

io_ganymede.png

Here's what Callisto would look like from Io.

io_callisto.png

Here's a combined view of the whole system, what Europa, Ganymede, Callisto, and Jupiter would look like from Io.

jovian_io.png

The view from Europa

The orbit of Io as seen from Europa is the same as the orbit of Europa as seen from Io.

Here's what the orbit of Ganymede would look like from Europa. It's similar to the view of Europa from Io because it is also a 2 : 1 resonance, i.e. the orbital period of Ganymede is approximately twice that of Europa.

europa_ganymede.png

Here's what the orbit of Callisto would look like from Europa.

europa_callisto.png

Here's a combined view of the whole system, what Io, Ganymede, Callisto, and Jupiter would look like from Io.

jovian_europa.png

The view from Ganymede

The view of Io from Ganymede is the same as the view of Ganymede from Io above. Similarly for Europa and Ganymede.

Here's what the orbit of Callisto would look like from Ganymede. The two moons are in a 7 : 3 resonance.

ganymede_callisto.png

Here's a combined view of the whole system from Ganymede.

jovian_ganymede.png

View of Callisto

The views of each of the moons from Callisto are presented above by symmetry. Here's what the whole Jovian system would look like from Callisto.

jovian_callisto.png

View from Jupiter

Finally, here's what the orbits of each of the moons looks like from Jupiter.

jovian_jupiter.png

Related postsThe view from a Galilean moon first appeared on John D. Cook.
External Content
Source RSS or Atom Feed
Feed Location http://feeds.feedburner.com/TheEndeavour?format=xml
Feed Title John D. Cook
Feed Link https://www.johndcook.com/blog
Reply 0 comments