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Loki Patera
Loki Patera
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Voyager 1 observation of Loki Patera and nearby lava flows and volcanic pits.
Loki Patera on moon Io
(artist's concept; 0:18).[1]
Map of temperature and crust age of Loki Patera obtained by the Large Binocular Telescope.

Loki Patera /ˈlki ˈpætərə/ is the largest volcanic depression on Jupiter's moon Io, 202 kilometres (126 mi) in diameter.[2] It contains an active lava lake, with an episodically overturning crust.[3] The level of activity seen is similar to a superfast spreading mid-ocean ridge on Earth.[4] It is the largest volcano on Io, producing about 10% of Io’s total thermal emission.[5] Temperature measurements of thermal emission at Loki Patera taken by Voyager 1's Infrared Interferometer Spectrometer and Radiometer (IRIS) instrument were consistent with sulfur volcanism.[6]

Loki Patera is located at 13°00′N 308°48′W / 13°N 308.8°W / 13; -308.8[7]. It is named after the Norse god Loki.[7] Amaterasu Patera is located to the north and Manua Patera to the northwest.[citation needed]

Geology

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Io's lava lakes such as Loki Patera are depressions partially filled with molten lava covered by a thin solidified crust. These lava lakes are directly connected to a magma reservoir below.[8] Observations of thermal emission at several of Io's lava lakes reveal glowing molten rock along Loki Patera's margin, caused by the lake's crust breaking up along the edge of the patera. Over time, because the solidified lava is denser than the still-molten magma below, this crust can founder, exposing fresh, hot molten rock.[9] At sites such as Loki Patera, this can occur episodically. During an overturning episode, Loki can emit up to ten times more heat than when its crust is stable.[3]

During an eruption, a wave of foundering crust has been observed to spread out across the patera at the rate of about 1 km (3,300 ft) per day, until the crust of the lake has been resurfaced. Another eruption then begins once the new crust has cooled and thickened enough for it to no longer be buoyant over the molten lava.[10]

History

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On 8 March 2015 (10 years ago) (2015-03-08), a rare orbital alignment occurred between Io and Europa, two of the moons of Jupiter, that allowed researchers to distinguish heat being emitted from Loki Patera. They were able to accomplish this because Europa's surface is coated in water ice which reflects small amounts of sunlight at infrared wavelengths. Scientists were able to determine that there were two waves of resurfacing lava, which explains the change in brightness on Loki Patera every 400–600 days. The images that helped researchers discover this were captured by the Large Binocular Telescope Observatory in southeast Arizona. The observation also revealed that there is a difference in the magma supply of the two halves of Loki.[11]

In December 2023 and February 2024, the Juno spacecraft completed extremely close flybys of Io, including the first closeup images of the northern latitudes, showing the islands within Loki Patera surrounded by a reflective glassy black surface.[12]

See also

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References

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Bibliography

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Loki Patera is the largest volcanic on Jupiter's moon Io, spanning approximately 225 kilometers in diameter and hosting a persistent that covers an area of about 21,500 square kilometers. This horseshoe-shaped depression, characterized by its low and intense thermal emissions, represents the most powerful and persistently in the solar system, driven by from Jupiter's gravitational forces. Located on Io's sub-Jovian hemisphere at approximately 13° N, 309° W, Loki Patera was first detailed during the Voyager 1 flyby in 1979, revealing active plumes and resurfacing activity. Subsequent observations by the Galileo spacecraft and ground-based telescopes have shown that its floor undergoes periodic resurfacing through a multi-phase process involving two counter-propagating waves of fresh, molten lava that originate from opposite sides of a central island and converge after traveling at speeds of 1–2 kilometers per day. These events cause dramatic thermal brightening every 400 to 600 days, with the active phase lasting around 230 days and accounting for up to 15% of Io's total heat flux during peaks. The volcano's activity, including temperatures ranging from 250 to 500 K in the resurfaced areas, underscores Io's extreme volcanism and provides key insights into extraterrestrial lava lake dynamics. Ongoing monitoring from Earth-based observatories, such as the Large Binocular Telescope, and recent space-based observations by the Juno spacecraft (as of 2024) and JWST (as of 2025), continues to refine models of its overturning mechanism, confirming the absence of traditional eruptive plumes in favor of crustal foundering and magma upwelling.

Physical characteristics

Location and dimensions

Loki Patera is situated at coordinates 13°00′N 308°48′W on the surface of Io, Jupiter's volcanically active innermost moon. This position places it in the sub-Jovian hemisphere of Io, within a region characterized by intense driven by orbital resonances with other Jovian satellites. Measuring approximately 202 km (126 mi) in , Loki Patera represents the largest known volcanic depression, or patera, on Io. Its expansive scale spans a shield-like structure typical of Io's low-relief volcanic edifices, covering roughly 0.05% of the moon's total surface area of about 42 million km² and highlighting its dominance among Io's approximately 400 identified volcanic centers. In terms of spatial context, Loki Patera lies near other prominent paterae, including Emakong Patera to the southeast and Gish Bar Patera farther east, contributing to the clustered distribution of volcanic features in Io's equatorial regions.

Morphology and surface features

Loki Patera is a large volcanic depression, or patera, on Jupiter's moon Io, characterized by a horseshoe-shaped outline with irregular boundaries and a broad, shallow interior basin. It spans approximately 200 km in diameter and covers an area of about 21,500 km², making it the largest such feature on Io. The structure resembles a , with a depressed interior confirmed by topographic analyses from imagery. The patera's walls are steep and scalloped, rising to heights of up to 900 m as measured from shadow lengths in high-resolution images, bounding a relatively flat floor partially filled with solidified lava. This floor exhibits a dark coloration typical of silicate-dominated s, such as Mg-rich orthopyroxene, indicative of basaltic compositions rather than sulfur-rich deposits. The surface displays a thin, solidified crust over underlying molten , with smoother patches in areas of recent resurfacing. Internally, Loki Patera contains multiple , including a prominent central island surrounded by low-lying and numerous smaller ones up to 3 km wide, spaced roughly 10 km apart. These , which have remained stable for at least 45 years, feature reflective, glassy-black surfaces in visible wavelengths and may represent tectonic remnants or central uplifts preserved amid the surrounding lava-flooded basin.

Geological activity

Lava lake dynamics

Loki Patera exhibits a persistent characterized by episodic overturning of its thin crust, which drives the dominant resurfacing mechanism. The crust, typically 1-10 meters thick, forms rapidly over the underlying molten material—likely basaltic silicate , though sulfur involvement has been proposed in some models—and periodically founders when its exceeds that of the beneath, sinking and exposing fresh, hot material. This foundering initiates resurfacing waves that propagate across the patera floor, renewing the surface in a cyclical process occurring roughly every 1-3 years. These resurfacing waves move at speeds of approximately 1 km per day, often in a multi-phase pattern where two distinct waves propagate in converging directions around the central island within the patera. Observations have documented both clockwise and counterclockwise flow directions; for instance, pre-2002 activity featured counterclockwise propagation from southwest to northeast, while post-2009 events showed a reversal to clockwise motion starting from the north/northeast. The waves traverse the patera's approximately 200 km perimeter in 100-200 days, effectively resurfacing the entire floor and causing the observed thermal brightening episodes. Recent Juno spacecraft observations from 2023 and 2024 suggest a possible variation in the resurfacing mechanism, with data indicating the onset of a new wave originating from a point source in 2024, rather than linear crust foundering. The eruption style at Loki Patera is non-explosive and effusive, resembling a stable sea rather than discrete volcanic eruptions, with upward magma motion compensating for the sinking crust at rates of 2-3 per year. A notable interruption occurred between 2002 and 2009, during which brightening events ceased, possibly indicating a temporary halt in the overturning cycle, before activity resumed with the aforementioned flow reversal. These dynamics occasionally coincide with spikes in thermal emissions during resurfacing peaks.

Thermal emissions and composition

Loki Patera is a dominant contributor to Io's global thermal budget, accounting for approximately 10% of the moon's total thermal emission on average. This significant heat output underscores its role as Io's most powerful persistent volcano, with the dark patera floor radiating an average power of about 101310^{13} W from an area of roughly 21,500 km². During episodes of crust overturning, thermal emissions can peak at up to 10 times the baseline level, reflecting episodic resurfacing events that expose hotter subsurface material. Recent JWST observations in 2022 and 2023 measured thermal powers of 7.45 TW and 8.0 TW, respectively, consistent with the average. The volcano's emissions are characterized by strong brightness, detectable from Earth-based telescopes due to its intense . Initial observations from in 1979 suggested sulfur-dominated volcanism, with inferred temperatures consistent with molten sulfur flows around 600–700 K. However, subsequent spacecraft data from Galileo and more recent ground-based and Juno observations revealed much higher temperatures, indicative of lavas ranging from 1,000–1,200°C (1,273–1,473 K), confirming basaltic or more compositions as the primary driver. These hotter signatures arise from cracks and vents during active phases, with varying markedly across the patera floor. Juno's 2023-2024 flybys provided high-resolution views, confirming the nature and identifying hot rings around the patera indicative of active resurfacing. Compositional analysis points to a hybrid of and materials at Loki Patera, shaped by its dynamic environment. The dark, low-albedo surfaces consist of rapidly cooled glasses, forming glassy black terrains from molten exposed during overturns. Brighter patches on the patera floor and margins likely represent deposits or mixtures of allotropes with silicates, while cooler peripheral areas may host (SO₂) frost, deposited from volcanic gases and contributing to the observed spectral variability. This blend reflects ongoing interactions between hot and -rich volatiles, with thermal models supporting a subsurface sea dominated by silicates but capped by -influenced crusts.

Observational history

Early spacecraft observations

The first observations of Loki Patera were obtained by NASA's during its flyby of in March 1979, which captured images revealing a prominent dark, shield-shaped feature on Io's surface approximately 200 kilometers across, accompanied by high thermal emissions indicative of volcanic activity. These images identified Loki as one of Io's most significant volcanic centers, with infrared data from the spacecraft's Infrared Interferometer Spectrometer and Radiometer (IRIS) detecting surface temperatures consistent with up to 450 K, far exceeding ambient levels and suggesting an initial interpretation as a sulfur-based consistent with Io's sulfur-rich surface deposits. The discovery also included a large plume rising above the feature, marking the first confirmed evidence of active extraterrestrial volcanism. Following the Voyager encounters, Loki Patera was officially named in 1979 by the , drawing from the Norse god to evoke its fiery and chaotic volcanic nature, with "patera" denoting the bowl-shaped morphology observed in the imagery. Subsequent analysis of Voyager data refined early understandings, establishing Loki as a persistent hotspot responsible for a substantial portion of Io's global heat output, though debates persisted over whether the emissions stemmed primarily from molten or hotter materials. NASA's Galileo spacecraft, orbiting Jupiter from 1995 to 2003, provided the most detailed early views of Loki Patera through multiple close flybys, confirming it as an active lava lake with dynamic resurfacing events captured in high-resolution images, particularly during 1997 observations that showed episodic flooding and crust overturning across the patera's floor. Near-Infrared Mapping Spectrometer (NIMS) and Photopolarimeter-Radiometer (PPR) data measured heat fluxes exceeding 10^11 watts, with temperatures up to 1,500 K in localized areas, contradicting the pure sulfur volcano model by demonstrating conditions incompatible with sulfur's low melting and boiling points and favoring basaltic silicate magmatism instead. These flybys also documented the absence of persistent plumes like those seen by Voyager, ruling out hypotheses of continuous gas-driven eruptions and supporting intermittent activity tied to internal overturning. Key findings from Galileo, combined with pre-existing Voyager thermal records, established Loki's characteristic episodic brightening cycles occurring approximately every 540 days, driven by periodic resurfacing rather than external triggers.

Ground-based and recent telescopic studies

Ground-based observations of Loki Patera began in the using large telescopes equipped with , such as the 10-m Keck telescopes, which achieved resolutions approaching 1 km per pixel at Io's distance, allowing tracking of thermal emissions and surface changes over time. These efforts built on earlier data to monitor periodic brightenings, with studies compiling data from 1987 to 2016 revealing quasi-periodic cycles of 440–540 days in thermal output. A 30-year timeline of observations indicated a hiatus in major brightening events around 2002, after which activity resumed in 2009 with a noted reversal in the direction of resurfacing flows from counterclockwise to clockwise. In , the Interferometer (LBTI) provided the first ground-based resolution of Loki Patera's internal structure, identifying two distinct hot spots separated by about 100 km and suggesting a multi-phase resurfacing process involving two propagating waves of molten material converging around the central island. These waves, observed during an by Europa on March 8, 2015, moved at speeds of about 1 km per day, resurfacing the patera's floor over approximately 500 days and accounting for the observed brightness variations of 400–600 days. enhancements on facilities like the LBT and Keck enabled ongoing monitoring through 2015, resolving features down to ~1 km and confirming flow reversals in resurfacing patterns during post-2009 activity. NASA's Juno spacecraft conducted close flybys of Io in December 2023 (perijove 57) and February 2024 (perijove 58), capturing the highest-resolution images of Loki Patera to date at scales as small as 1 km per pixel with the JunoCam instrument. These images revealed a central island complex amid a vast lava lake, with the lake's surface appearing exceptionally smooth and glassy, resembling obsidian formed from rapidly cooling basaltic lava. Infrared data from Juno's Jovian Infrared Auroral Mapper (JIRAM) during these passes showed a distinctive thermal structure, with brightening concentrated near the lake's perimeter rather than a central hot spot, contrasting with typical terrestrial lava lakes. A more distant Juno flyby of Io occurred on March 3, 2025 (perijove 70), allowing further observation of Loki's hotspot for landscape changes. Recent ground-based observations continued with the Large Binocular Telescope in early 2025, using the SHARK-VIS instrument to map surface changes and ongoing lava wave propagation at resolutions sufficient to track resurfacing dynamics. In October 2024, additional Juno data from extended mission flybys confirmed the perimeter-dominated thermal patterns at Loki Patera, highlighting its unique emission profile compared to other Io paterae and emphasizing the lake's stable, high-temperature margins. February 2025 analysis of Juno JIRAM data further confirmed widespread lava lakes on Io, including Loki Patera's dynamic resurfacing. December 2024 ground-based studies provided new constraints on Loki's periodic brightening cycles. These combined Earth- and space-based studies through 2025 have refined the understanding of Loki Patera's dynamic surface, with adaptive optics enabling consistent tracking of flow directions and thermal hotspots from afar.

Scientific interpretations

Activity cycles and orbital influences

Loki Patera's volcanic activity is characterized by periodic brightenings and resurfacing events that occur every 400–600 days. A 2019 analysis of near-infrared observations spanning 1987–2018 found quasi-periodic behavior with best-fit periods of approximately 454–482 days (preferred ~454 days), linked to Io's orbital eccentricity variations on timescales of ~460–480 days driven by gravitational interactions with . These cycles manifest as sudden increases in thermal emission, followed by gradual declines, indicating episodic resurfacing of the patera's surface. Tidal heating, resulting from Io's eccentric orbit, plays a key role in modulating Loki Patera's activity, with enhanced occurring near perijove passages when stresses are maximized. The volcano's brightness waxes and wanes in synchronization with these orbital positions, as forces flex Io's interior and potentially trigger upwelling at the patera. This control aligns with broader patterns of Io's , where eccentricity maxima correlate with peak activity phases at Loki Patera. Over the observational record to 2018, Loki Patera exhibits quasi-periodic variations with data gaps (e.g., 2002–2009) possibly hiding undetected events due to timing around the preferred cycle. Thermal output peaks at Loki Patera consistently align with these resurfacing events, influenced by Io's eccentric maintained by its 1:2:4 with Europa and Ganymede. Recent Juno/JIRAM observations during close flybys (December 2023 and February 2024) indicate the possible onset of a new resurfacing wave originating from a in 2024, suggesting localized upwelling rather than uniform foundering. JWST observations from 2022 to November 2025 detected thermal brightening events at Loki Patera, including an increase in emissions in late 2025, further supporting episodic activity tied to tidal modulation.

Models of volcanic processes

One prominent model posits Loki Patera as a magma sea consisting of a large body of molten basaltic material overlain by a floating crust that periodically overturns due to buoyancy instability. This , developed in , describes the subsurface magma as isothermal at approximately 1475 K, with a crust that thickens to about 7 m over a 540-day cycle through cooling and solidification, reaching a of 30–40% at depths greater than 1 m. The model's thermal output, averaging 9.6 TW and ranging from 5.7 to 15.6 TW, aligns with observed uniform high temperatures across the patera floor, indicating a deep, well-mixed melt body uninfluenced by bottom boundaries. Numerical simulations within this framework incorporate and contrasts to explain crust , where the cooling crust becomes denser than the underlying liquid, leading to foundering and propagation of a resurfacing wave at speeds of approximately 1 km/day. These models predict that the wave's advance results from continuous and crust , recycling the patera's surface material every 540 days and producing the observed episodic brightening. The basaltic composition assumption rejects earlier sulfur lake ideas, as 's lower temperatures fail to match the high thermal emissions. Alternative interpretations, including debates over a sulfur-dominated versus silicate magma sea, have evolved with observations favoring a primarily basaltic melt enriched in sulfur volatiles on the surface. In 2017, resurfacing wave models refined this view by simulating multi-phase processes involving flow and radiative heat diffusion, revealing two propagating waves converging around the central island at 1–2 km/day in an anti-clockwise direction. These simulations account for non-uniform crust and lava gas content, with temperature maps derived from imaging showing cooling ages consistent with episodic overturn rather than steady-state flow. Despite these advances, key uncertainties persist, including the precise depth of the melt (estimated as potentially tens to hundreds of meters but not directly measured), the exact balance of sulfur-rich versus basaltic components in the , and the long-term of the system under Io's intense tidal stresses that drive global heating. Ongoing models continue to refine these aspects by integrating tidal deformation effects on without resolving the full structural dynamics.

References

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