Io, moon of Jespiter Jupiter, is famously volcanically active. It has more than 400 active volcanoes, over an area the size of Asia. Some of the volcanic mountains are taller than Mount Everest. The sulphur deposits have painted Io into 50 shades of yellow. But Io is only one of the 4 major moons of Jupiter. The other moons are fascinating, and have ice, water and geology – but no known volcanoes. And there another 90-odd smaller satellites, also volcano-free. What makes Io such an exceptional world?

This image of Io is NASA’s Science Calendar Image of the Month for October 2025. It was captured by JunoCam, the imager on NASA’s Juno spacecraft from about 1500 km above the surface. It reveals some of Io’s fascinating volcanic surface details. The right side (dayside) of the image is lit up by the Sun, while the left side (nightside) is illuminated by Jupiter-shine, sunlight reflecting from Jupiter back onto Io. Image Credit: NASA/Jet Propulsion Laboratory–Caltech/Southwest Research Institute (SwRI)/Malin Space Science Systems (MSSS); Image processing: Emma Wälimäki, CC BY
Exploration
Io’s volcanic nature was seen by passing spacecraft. The first visitor was Pioneer 10, on 3 December 1973. It ran into a problem: Jupiter has high-energy radiation belts, and these interfered with the on-board electronics. Images of Ganymede and Europe were obtained (rather poor ones, by today’s standard, but at the time they were unique), but a planned image of Io failed. Pioneer 11 followed a year later, and it did manage to take two distant images of Io. It showed few details on the moon, but found the yellowish colour.
But the first indications of Io’s volcanic nature were not found by spacecraft but with telescopes on Earth. This was on 20 February 1978 when the infrared emission of Io was being measured. Two observations gave the same result. But 5 hours later, a further observation found that the emission at a wavelength of 5 micron had doubled, while it had remained the same at wavelengths shortward of 3 micron. This was difficult to explain other than as a source of heat that had come into view as Io rotated. It required a temperature of 300-400 C, very hot compared to Io’s surface. (Hotter emission would have been seen at 3 micron as well (the wavelengths used for detecting fires) while cooler heat would have required even longer wavelengths than 5 micron.) The observers and authors went through a series of possible explanations. They considered volcanism but ruled that out because no active volcano had been observed anywhere else in the solar system (other than on Earth) – so why would Io have one?
Voyager 1 passed Io on 4 March 1979. The images were a sensation. They revealed a surface that was covered in volcanic features. Four days later, an image taken when looking back at Io showed two on-going eruptions, one of which appeared as an immense plume seen at the edge of the moon. Voyager had caught the first volcanic eruptions outside of the Earth! (In hindsight, of course, Io is so active that there was a reasonable chance of seeing this.) And the unbelievers changed their opinion overnight. Within months, a stream of publications came out post-predicting the volcanic activity, interestingly including many from Russia.

Voyager 1, 8 March 1979, looking back. The two volcanic eruptions are the spot near the day-night boundary, and the plume at the edge.
Ever since, every passing spacecraft has tried to take images of Io. New Horizons, on the way to frozen wilderness of Pluto, found 9 active volcanoes in one image. We have maps of the moon showing the volcanoes, many of which have been given names (some more than one). Lava flows and lava lakes have been mapped. Originally, it had been thought that volcanic eruptions in Io would be gaseous – the presence of lava had not been expected. This was one of the reasons that the discoverers of the heat pulse has discounted volcanism, because hot gas would have cooled too fast. It is easy to overlook what seems obvious in hindsight. We have seen plinian eruptions and overturning lava lakes. An excellent overview of the various volcanic features is in Jesper’s VC post on Io.

The surface of Io, adapted from: https://britastro.org/jupiter/2011/Io_map_labeld.jpg, with some additional labels added
Even the James Webb Space Telescope has taken part. In November 2022, JWST saw an eruption at Kanehekili. In August 2023, it had another look: between the two observations, the lava field had expanded four-fold, to over 4000 km2. And this is just one of the lava flows produced by Io. The lava flows are impressive!
Plumes and snow
The other eruption type for which Io is famous are the plume forming explosions. This is what Voyager spotted. On Earth, volcanic plumes can reach 30 km in altitude, perhaps once per decade. Not on Io. Its plumes reached hundreds of kilometers height. The Cassini space probe, passing on the way to Saturn and Titan, saw a plume from Pele reaching 400 km and there are reports of heights of 460 km. Tvashtar is another regular, detected to a height of 380 km by Cassini. Some 15 or more of Io’s volcanoes are known to cause plumes. Of these, Tvashtar is the only one located near the poles. All others are near the equator. The tallest plumes are called Pele-type plumes: they leave a red ring around the vent, with a diameter about four times the height of the plume.
Why are Io’s plumes so high? There are two reasons. Io is about the size of our Moon, and has similar surface gravity – about 6 times less than on Earth. For the same eruption speed, Io’s ejecta will reach 6 times higher. The other reason is the lack of atmosphere at Io: the gasses that are being erupted can rise without being stopped by our air. This is not straightforward: eruption plumes on Earth rise because of the heat which makes it buoyant: it rises like a thundercloud, driven by convection. That does not work without an atmosphere. Io’s plumes are close to ballistic. The ejection speeds may be as high as 1 km/sec. Ballistic flows at that speed can indeed reach a height of 300 km. However, the gas plumes do in fact form their own atmosphere, and this gives rise to the shapes seen in the space probe images. Io’s atmosphere is almost non-existent, but the important word is ‘almost’. Some of the gasses manage to escape Io’s gravity: the mini-atmosphere leaks into space, where the atoms are caught by Jupiter’s magnetic field.

Drawing of a typical plume. Source: Imke de Pater et al. 2023, The plumes and atmosphere of Io. https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-031-25670-7_8
What is in the plumes? The lavas are liquid rock, albeit with a lowish silicate fraction. The plumes contain some rock dust but otherwise must come from volatiles. But which ones? This was solved almost immediately after the volcanoes were discovered. Io’s volcanism is so extensive that any volatiles will quickly run out. Water is one such volatile. It is quite a light molecule, and therefore can reach high speeds. Io’s gravity is insufficient to hold onto it. It becomes even worse if the water is dissociated by solar UV radiation. If Io emits water at a rate of 105 kg/sec (a typical rate for an Earth volcano), and assuming that 20% of Io is water (rather a high estimate), the entire water content of the moon would already have been lost. CO2 has the same problem. So these must have run out long ago. Why are there still plumes?
The answer is sulphur. It is a volatile, but a heavy one and not as volatile as the lighter ones. Io’s sulphur content may amount to a few per cent of the moon’s mass. At Io’s typical surface temperature (away from the volcanoes), it forms a solid. But this evaporates at 440C, and so magma will happily turn any sulphur on the surface which it meets into vapour. S2 and SO2 are both expected to be present in silicate magmas. S2 has been detected in the plumes at the roughly 10% level expected to be present in the magma, but has only been found above volcanic vents. UV photons quickly ionize it and it is destroyed in the subsequent chemistry. That leaves SO2 as the dominant molecule in the plumes and atmosphere, There is also some 10% of SO, formed by photodissociation of SO2 and trace amounts of atomic oxygen and even O2.
The crucial component is SO2. This molecule can condense as the plume rises and cools, in effect forming sulphurous snow. The snow flakes will fall back to the surface. Over time the snow fall is buried by new snow, at a rate of typically 0.5 cm/year. Lavas add to the resurfacing. After 10 million years, it may be buried 5 km deep. At this point, it may be hot enough to melt, become mobile and become part of a new batch of magma. Thus, while other volatiles are lost, sulphur is recycled. It is a renewable resource.
It is a bit surprising to find sulphur snow on a planet without an atmosphere. But that is the solar system for you: like the infamous box of chocolates, every body is different. That was one of the lessons of the Pioneers and Voyagers, in the age of discovery of the 1970’s and 80’s. (We have since found metal snow on Venus. The Solar System is a strange place.)
The life time of Io’s atmosphere is of order 10 days, after which it will escape of fall back. The atmosphere is constantly being renewed by volcanic activity.
Heat and tides
We have not yet answered the question why Io is so volcanically active. Volcanoes are driven by internal heat. Planets obtain that heat mainly from radioactive decay. But small bodies lose heat much faster than big ones, and so this is less effective in moons the size of Io. This is why volcanoes on Io were such a surprise.
In fact, this problem had been solved just before Voyager 1’s encounter. The answer lies in the tides of Io.
Tides come from changes in gravity across a moon or planet. Take the Earth. It is subject to gravity from our Moon. That force is stronger on the side of the Earth facing the Moon than on the opposite side, since they are at different distances from the Moon. The difference in distance is only 3%, but gravity goes as the inverse square of the distance so the difference in the force is 6%. The Earth is quite solid and able to withstand the different pull. But the oceans are not. Where the ocean is facing the Moon, the water is pulled towards it. On the opposite side, the water moves away a bit. This gives two high tides, separated by two low tides. The Moon isn’t very big, so the tides aren’t that high. (In fact, the Sun contributes about 30% to our tides. It is much further away but also very much bigger than the Moon. The two compensate each other. Take the Moon away, and we would still have tides – just only a third as high.
Io suffers tidal forces from Jupiter. But it has found a way to avoid this. First, its orbit is perfectly circular so the tidal force is constant. Second, it always faces the same side to Jupiter, so the tidal bulge is stationary. The moon has adjusted its shape to Jupiter’s tides and is perfectly stable.
Or would have been, had it not been for its neighbours. For Jupiter has four major satellites: Ganymede, Callisto, Europa and Io. And the four orbit Jupiter together in an intricate dance that ruins Io’s precious stability.
<a href=”https://www.volcanocafe.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/word-image-15664-2.png”><img class=”size-full wp-image-15666″ src=”https://www.volcanocafe.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/word-image-15664-2.png” alt=”” width=”470″ height=”320″ /></a> Jupiter’s worlds: Graphic by Nasa.Io is the innermost one of the large satellites (there are another 90 or so small satellites) and orbits fastest: it goes around Jupiter in 1.76 days. Europa, the next one out, goes around in 3.53 days. Ganymede takes 7.16 days and Callisto, the outermost one, takes 16.69 days. For every orbit of Europa, Io takes exactly 2. For every orbit of Ganymede, Io does 4 orbits. (The ratio is not as precise as the one with Europa.) The situation with Callisto is a bit different: for every orbit of Callisto, Io does 9.5.
So the orbits of Io, Europa and Ganymede have ratios of the periods of 1:2:4. This is a so-called resonance and it could be disastrous. In such a resonance, whenever Europa passes Io, at a time its gravitational force on Io is strongest, it is pulling in the same direction. Over time, this will make Io’s orbit more and more elliptical. The same happens through Ganymede. Luckily, the closest approaches of both moons happen on opposite sides of Io’s orbit. This means they counter each other and it stops Io’s orbit from becoming unstable. (The real situation is a bit more complex since the resonance is not exact and the orbits are not exactly in the same plane (though close) and not exactly circular (though close). But this is how it works out over longer times.)
The effect is that the other moons pull Io a bit out of its originally circular orbit. It is now having a slightly elliptical orbit. Now, Jupiter’s gravity varies a bit as Io moves a bit further and closer to the giant planet. And worse, Io is now also wiggling bit: the same side is no longer pointing exactly at Jupiter, because the moon orbits a bit slower when further from Jupiter and a bit faster when closest, while it rotates at a constant speed. This causes Io to wiggle a bit. Now, Jupiter’s tides have something to catch.
The differences are small – but Jupiter’s tidal force is immense and Io is being pulled and stretched by the big boss. The solid body of the moon doesn’t like it one bit but has no choice. It is this constant kneading of Io’s insides which generates heat – and this heat drives the volcanoes. The tidal forces increase with distance from the centre of Io – so while its core is fine, regions closer to the surface receive the full brunt.
Why do the other moons not have such volcanic heat? They are further from Jupiter – and the tidal force decreases with the cube of the distance. Of the others, Europa is most affected and its tides have given it a liquid ocean. The effect on Io is off the scale.
The first calculations of this tidal heat were done just before Voyager 1 arrived – and these people predicted widespread melting and volcanism. As was in fact found on Voyager’s arrival.
However, calculating how much heat is generated by tidal forces is quite complicated. It depends on how ductile the interior of Io is. We know that the surface is stiff: there are mountains up to 17 km high on Io, so the crust must be strong enough to carry this weight. But deeper down, below the crust, it depends on whether Io has melted or not: liquid is much stronger affected by tides and would generate more heat. This is something we don’t know. Models suggest the average heat flow through the surface is around 2 W/m2, ten times higher than would be expected from radioactivity.

Source: James Keane et al., 2024, Tidal Heating and the Interior Structure of Io. Astrophysics and Space Science Library
Volume 468, Io: a new view of Jupiter’s moon.
The diagram depicts four possibilities, which differ in how deep the tidal heat is generated and whether there is a magma ocean, a magma sponge, or neither. It is a depiction of our lack of knowledge.
There is an interesting prediction from tidal heating. The tidal force is strongest along the line Jupiter – Io. Most heat would be generated at the point that has Jupiter overhead, and on the opposite side. Both points are on Io’s equator. Little heat would be generated halfway between, and this includes the polar regions. The volcanoes should therefore be clustered in these two regions. Do we see that?
The answer is – no, to some degree. The volcanoes are not fully uniformly nor randomly spread out, but the pattern predicted by the tidal models is not clearly seen. There are other patterns. Most continuously active hot spots are located within 30 degrees of the equator, while the intermittently active hot spots are mostly between 40 and 60 degrees latitude from the equator. When measuring hot spots at one moment, more are seen near the equator, but averaging over several years catches the intermittent erupts and reveals a more uniform distribution. Most (but not all) of Io’s mountains (which may be associated with colder crust) are located along the equator away from the line Io-Jupiter, as would be expected from (lack of) tidal heating, but they are offset by 30 degrees west rather than the expected 90 degrees.
An interesting finding is that the hot spots are randomly spread out, except along the equator where they tend to keep uniform distances. That is something we know from Earth: in a volcanic region, individual volcanoes tend to be located at similar distances from each other. This is because they compete for their magma, just like bushes in semi-desert compete for water and grow at uniform distances. We have called this ‘volcano ecology’ in VC.
This may favour models where tidal heat is distributed across Io before it reaches the surface, but not so well that every location gets the same amount heat. Perhaps something intermediate between a solid moon and a deep magma ocean.
And could it be that we are being affected by our viewing angle? From Earth, we see the equator of Io much better than the poles. Most passing spacecraft also stuck to the the equatorial plane. There have been several claims for fewer volcanoes in the polar regions, as even mentioned in this post. Could this be just because they are harder to see, especially if not persistently active? A recent paper has made that claim. The evidence came from Juno spacecraft, a mission send to student the polar regions of Jupiter. Its polar orbit allowed it to also image to poles of Io. Juno found that Loki to be the brightest infrared emitter on Io. The Chalybes Region (see the map above) is found to have four detectable volcanoes. In the south, Kanehekili was detected and two other volcanoes near it. They find a more uniform distribution of volcanoes across Io. However, the volcanic flux at the poles remains lower than elsewhere on Io. Although this agrees with the tidal heating predictions, they find that none of the four models depicted above give a good fit to the data. Io is more complicated than that.
In the Juno data, all regions of high volcanic flux were surrounded by regions of notably low flux. The authors interpret this as magma scarcity, i.e. the ecology argument above. Loki is especially noteworthy for depressing volcanic activity in wide area around it.
This gives a different view of Io, where the volcanoes act as valves for the magma below. Perhaps they are governed by faults in the Io crust. Faults would not be unexpected, given the amount of lava that collects on the surface over million years. This buries and depresses the older crust and th stress can cause faults and earth- io-quakes. It is tectonics shaped by volcanoes and in turn governing those volcanoes.
And there the story of Io comes to a pause. The moon is located in an area of hard radiation which can cause havoc with spacecraft electronics (as happened to Pioneer), due to the magnetic field of Jupiter. An Io-orbiter would have a hard time surviving. But I for one would love to see an orbiter happen.
The missions of the 70’s and 80’s discovered a secret solar system where moons turned into magic new worlds unlike any we had known before. The magic is still there. We need to go back.
Albert, November 2025






Thanks Albert! 💕💥🌋 for another post in my most favorite object in this whole solar system! Io have keept me obessed since 2005 when I was 10 and began to read about Io. I really hopes for more spaceprobes to Io in the future so I can finaly get satisfyed for the first time. I also plans to make more Io VC posts later
Hopes SpaceX and Musky coud get intested in Io one day 😒 I woud LIKE to be Elon Musk but with my brain and personality with so much cash I woud be able to get my Ionian Superprobe.. it woud be the ONLY thing I woud focus on during the first years there
https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1029/2024JE008723
Lava lakes seems to be everywhere on Io, many of the dark round spots on Io are lava lakes or calderas thats been resurfaced by dark basaltic lava ( too hot for sulfur snow to settle ). The surface lava flows forms more fractal and flow shaped patterns
https://www.volcanocafe.org/ios-pillan-patera-eruption-in-1997-the-largest-lava-falls-ever-seen/
Here you can read a detailed description of the 1997 eruption at Pillan Patera ( caldera ) and its spectacular lava falls over the rim. This is a sight that Sauron and Morgoth sourely woud ENJOY to see… I guess if Galileo knew the moons true nature, he woud have never named it Io
The fiery Mustafar was indeed Lucas own imagination of Io. Mustafar is just like Io torn by tidal forces from its nearby gas giant, on this planet Skywalker got severe burn injuries in the lava flows and had therefore to live inside the Darth Vader suit for the rest of his life. Io is Jupiters’ own darth vader moon!
The famous Mustafar battle
Part 1 https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=8TWPToeLdj4&pp=ygURYW5ha2luIHZzIG9iaSB3YW4%3D
Part 2 https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=UPsTXNAA-T8
Becomming Vader after the duel.. https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=6FMP4Sff8w0&pp=ygUaYW5ha2luIGJlY29tZXMgZGFydGggdmFkZXLSBwkJAwoBhyohjO8%3D
Juno have now come back with new eruption data and images as well, make soure to read those too
Well you have but there where many new papers out this autumn and in the recent months specialy so of discoverey of an incandescent 50 km long open lava channel flowing into one of the calderas
Galileo Spacecraft showing dark fresh pahoehoe flows on Io comming from the large Zamana volcano. Its identical to the fluid hawaiian pahoehoe at Kilauea but far larger in scale. Puu Oo flow fields are 16 km wide in comparison. Even better shots at pahoehoe flows at Io where photographed at Prometheous flows at Io
https://www.flickr.com/photos/kevinmgill/54284102007/
Nice high quality Voyager view of Maasaw Patera near Io s South Pole I think. A massive shield volcano with numerous dark basaltic Aa/Pahoehoe lava flows and channels originating from the edge of the caldera walls. Its completely fascinating perhaps it formed through past high lava lakes levels when the lava lake overflowed, or through ring fault eruptions like the Galapagos sheilds. The inner crater may host a lava lake being light it maybe stagnant having a thick calm crust thats gotten cold enough for sulfur snow to settle on the crust basalt glass. There likley been numerous of collapses and refillings
Its a giant .. almost 200 kilometers wide and the calderas walls are taller than grand canyons walls! volcanoes on Io are often MUCH larger than the volcanoes we haves on Earth the features are oversized, only Hawaii comes close yet Hawaiian while VERY massive edifices are quite small too compared to most of Io s volcanoes of course. Loki Patera is of course the the magnum opus of Ionian central volcanoes a basaltic lava sea almost as big as Switzerland .. !
Jespter’s moon! LOL!
You should make haste before adventurers colonize the place, Jesper!
I wants both a new special probe custom built for Io by Spacex an Io orbiter and a new atmosphere probe for Jupiter for a new try into the gassack likley entry spot at great red spot.