GeminiFocus October 2014 | Page 9

Outlook While these enormously powerful eruptions are exciting and important for advancing our knowledge of Io, a global understanding requires studying the whole range of volcanic processes on this moon over time. With this goal in mind, we have been monitoring Io with Gemini North and the IRTF regularly since the fall of 2013; we will continue our Gemini observations into 2015. This program allows us to watch the week-to-week variability in Io’s overall volcanic activity and the evolution of specific active regions. The study is key to understanding how the volcanic dissipation of Io’s tidally-generated heat is di stributed spatially and temporally. In addition, frequent observations increase our chances of capturing major eruptions as they occur. Our detection of three such energetic Ionian events in the same month (or even the same year!) is extremely unusual. Perhaps these events were physically linked by an unknown mechanism, and clusters of eruptions are more common than we think. Or perhaps we fortuitously caught Io at a unique point when three unrelated eruptions happened to coincide. Then again, previous analyses may have simply underestimated the frequency of outburst eruptions in general. At this point in time, too few such events have been detected to distinguish between these possibilities. Future observations, including our ongoing program at Gemini North, will help answer this question. References: Davies, A.G., et al., “Observing Iceland’s Eyjafjallajökull 2010 eruptions with the autonomous NASA volcano sensor web,” Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth, 118: 1–21, 2013 de Kleer, K., et al., “Near-infrared monitoring of Io and detection of a violent outburst on 29 August 2013,” Icarus, in press, 2014 de Pater, I., et al., “Two new, rare, high-effusion outburst eruptions at Rarog and Heno Paterae on Io,” Icarus, in press, 2014 Marchis, F., et al., “High-resolution Keck adaptive optics imaging of violent activity on Io,” Icarus, 160: 124–131, 2002 Katherine de Kleer is a Ph.D. student at UC Berkeley and can be reached at: [email protected] Figure 4. IRTF SpeX spectrum of the August 29th outburst with model fits. The 1475 K model assumes basaltic magmas, while the 1900 K model assumes an ultramafic magma composition. Figure adapted from de Kleer et al., 2014. October 2014 GeminiFocus 7