craters
craters
Europa...
No. Io is one of the four major moons of Jupiter. The moons of Mars are Phobos and Deimos.
Yes, there are numerous photos of Jupiter's moons taken by spacecraft like Voyager, Galileo, and Juno. These images provide valuable insights into the characteristics and features of the moons, such as Io's volcanic activity, Europa's icy surface, Ganymede's complex terrain, and Callisto's ancient cratered surface.
everyone nose that the moon is made out of cheese, but what most people don't know is there are nachos deep in the core
MarsYou have listed three features of the planet; rocky surface, hot temperature, and 2 moons. While Mars is a terrestrial planet (has a rocky surface) and has 2 moons (Phobos and Deimos), you're wrong on the last feature, in which you have written that Mars has hot temperature conditions. This is wrong, because the temperature on Mars is usually well below zero.
Earth's shadow on the moon proved that earth wasn't flat. When galileo first turned his telescope to the moon, he found a surface scarred by craters and maria. Before that time, many people believed that all planetary bodies were "perfect" without surface features.
You would not be able to see the moons from the surface; Jupiter's atmosphere is too thick.
The moons surface is covered with regolith. There are 2 main kinds of surface; maria and highlands. There are lots of craters and dust. the moons sky is always black.it has no air or water
Sort of. Jupiter's moon Europa has linear features on its surface that are likely the result of processes similar to plate tectonics on earth.
Those features are called rilles, which are long, narrow valleys on the surface of the Moon. They can be several kilometers wide and hundreds of kilometers long, and are thought to have been formed by ancient lava flows or tectonic activity.
Metorites