In average about 110 K (-160 C,-260 F)At the equator and only 50 K(-220 C,-370 F) at the poles
-170
Yes, it's known that there is water on Europa. The real question is what temperature it is. The surface temperature is below freezing, but subsurface temperatures could be (and in fact almost certainly are) substantially warmer.
It was sent into Jupiters atmosphere due to the possibility of an ocean beneath the icy crust of jupiters moon europa. Galileo could potentially be carrying bacteria that could be harmful to europa, so was destroyed to protect it.
Europa probably contains a metallic iron core. Little information about its deep internal structure is known, but this is what scientists think.
Europa - WaterIO - Most volcanically active body in the Solar System
neither. Europa is not a planet, but one of Jupiters moons.
Europa is Jupiters moon.
Obviously not, Europa is a moon, not a star.
Yes.
Europa
Yes, it's known that there is water on Europa. The real question is what temperature it is. The surface temperature is below freezing, but subsurface temperatures could be (and in fact almost certainly are) substantially warmer.
it is far 580 miles away from jupiter
4.56 billion years old, but it's surface is younger.
It was sent into Jupiters atmosphere due to the possibility of an ocean beneath the icy crust of jupiters moon europa. Galileo could potentially be carrying bacteria that could be harmful to europa, so was destroyed to protect it.
Europa probably contains a metallic iron core. Little information about its deep internal structure is known, but this is what scientists think.
Ganymede is Jupiter's largest moon. The top four of its largest moons are Europa, Io, Callisto, and Ganymede.
Europa - WaterIO - Most volcanically active body in the Solar System
By Mars's 3'd moon, not joking if you're an Astronomist this question is a piece of cake.