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Live Science on MSNAsteroid 10 times bigger than the dinosaur-killing space rock smashed Jupiter's largest moon off its axisNew simulations show that Jupiter's massive moon Ganymede was knocked off its axis when it was struck by a roughly 90-mile-wide asteroid around 4 billion years ago. The colossal collision was likely ...
Ganymede is the seventh moon and third Galilean satellite outward from Jupiter, orbiting at about 665,000 miles (1,070 million kilometers).
While Ganymede hasn’t yet been observed spewing plumes of water vapor like Saturn’s moon Enceladus, Jupiter’s largest moon is most likely hiding an enormous saltwater ocean.
An ancient impact Ganymede has long intrigued Hirata, who said he believes uncovering its evolution is “meaningful.” The moon’s surface is a study in contrasts, with bright regions of ridges ...
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An Ancient Asteroid Smashed Into Jupiter's Moon Ganymede and Tipped It Over, Study Finds - MSNGanymede is a tidally locked moon, which means it always shows the same face to Jupiter—and, as a result of the impact, the crater is permanently shielded from Jupiter’s view.
Diagram of the ancient Ganymede impact sending the moon tilting. Kobe University. 3 / 4. Image showing the fractures caused by the impact and the impact site (red cross) Kobe University. 4 / 4.
With a diameter of 3,273 miles/5,268 kilometers, Ganymede is the largest moon and the ninth-largest object in the solar system, bigger than the planet Mercury and dwarf planet Pluto.
A new study revealed that a massive asteroid may have hit Jupiter’s moon Ganymede about 4 billion years ago, shifting the moon on its axis. CNN values your feedback 1.
By Ashley Strickland, CNN (CNN) — Jupiter’s moon Ganymede may have shifted on its axis when a massive asteroid smashed into it about 4 billion years ago, according to a new study. Ganymede ...
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