Ganymede
Cambridge Planetary Science Series

Coordinators: Volwerk Martin, McGrath Melissa, Jia Xianzhe, Spohn Tilman

Language: English
Cover of the book Ganymede

Subject for Ganymede

152.43 €

Not Yet Published

Add to cartAdd to cart
Publication date:
600 p. · Hardback
With ESA's upcoming JUpiter ICy moons Explorer (JUICE) mission to Jupiter and Ganymede, this book provides a fascinating and timely summary of our current knowledge about Ganymede: the largest moon in the Solar System and the only one with an intrinsic magnetic field. Written by a team of multidisciplinary experts spanning geology, space physics and habitability, it provides up-to-date knowledge about Ganymede. The history of its discovery, formation, surface, atmosphere and space environment are discussed in accessible language and supported by the enormous amount of data obtained by Galileo, the Hubble Space Telescope and earlier missions. The latest surface maps of Ganymede are also presented, providing an invaluable reference for graduate students and researchers working in planetary science.
Part I: History, Origin, Dynamics: 1. Ganymede through the ages Martin Volwerk, Katrin Stephan and Roland Wagner; 2. Origin of Ganymede and the Galilean moons Yuhito Shibaike and Yann Alibert; 3. The rotation of Ganymede Alexander Stark, Rose-Marie Baland and Tim van Hoolst; 4. Tidal deformation and tidal evolution of Ganymede Gregor Steinbrügge, Hauke Hussmann and Gabriel Tobie; 5. Ganymede's statigraphy and geologic evolution Ralf Jaumann, Katrin Stephan and Roland Wagner; Part II: Geology, Surface, Interior: 6. Internal structure of Ganymede Hauke Hussmann, Gerald Schubert and Gregor Steinbrügge; 7. Ganymede's geology Robert Pappalardo, Marissa Cameron and Geoffrey Collins; 8. The cratering record of Ganymede: surface ages, impactor populations, and evolutional history Michelle Kirchoff, Amy Barr and Michael Bland; 9. The topography of Ganymede: geology, global characteristics, and future exploration Paul Schenk, William McKinnon and Jeffrey Moore; 10. Ganymede's surface composition Katrin Stephan, Charles Hibbitts and Nicolas Ligier; 11. Physical chemistry and thermal properties of ices at Ganymede Caitlin Ahrens, Anezina Solomonidou and Katrin Stephan; 12. Structure and evolution of Ganymede's hydrosphere Klára Kalousová, Krista Soderlund and Anezina Solomonidou; 13. The origin of Ganymede's internal magnetic field Ulrich Christensen, Tina Rückriemen-Bez and Gerald Schubert; Part III: Atmosphere, Ionosphere, Magnetosphere: 14. Ganymede: its magnetosphere and its interaction with the Jovian magnetosphere Margaret Kivelson, Fran Bagenal and Xianzhe Jia; 15. Interactions between the space environment and Ganymede's surface André Galli, Audrey Vorburger and Peter Wurz; 16. Ganymede's tenuous atmosphere Lorenz Roth, Christina Plainaki and Apurva Oza; 17. The ionosphere of Ganymede Marina Galand, Gianluca Carnielli and Xianzhe Jia; 18. Ganymede's aurora Herbert Gunell, Lorenz Roth and Shahab Fatemi; 19. Electrodynamic coupling between Ganymede and the Jovian ionosphere Bertrand Bonfond and Philippe Zarka; Part IV: Astrobiology: 20. Habitability of Ganymede: conditions for sustainability of life and geochemical biosignatures Julian Chela-Flores; Appendix 1: maps of Ganymede Thomas Roatsch, Elke Kersten and Geoffrey Collins; Appendix 2: Ganymede parameters: tables from the book; Index.
Martin Volwerk is a permanent member of staff at the Space Research Institute of the Austrian Academy of Sciences, Co-Investigator on the JUICE magnetometer and those on other missions, and national Co-Principal Investigator on the Comet Interceptor mission. His thirty-year career as a planetary plasma physicist has focused on studying plasma interactions at the Galilean moons, ultra-low frequency waves in planetary magnetospheres, and cometary plasma physics.
Melissa McGrath is a senior scientist at the Carl Sagan Science Center, SETI Institute. She has had a distinguished career with over thirty years of experience as a planetary scientist studying Jupiter's four large Galilean satellites: Io, Europa, Ganymede and Callisto. She has worked on numerous NASA missions, including the Hubble Space Telescope, and the upcoming JUICE and Europa Clipper missions, and she has held leadership positions at NASA, the International Astronomical Union, and the American Astronomical Society. She has also served as a scientific editor for The Astrophysical Journal.
Xianzhe Jia is a Professor at the University of Michigan. He is a space physicist with expertise in combining computer simulations with spacecraft measurements to study magnetic fields and plasma phenomena in planetary environments. He is Co-Investigator on the JUICE and Europa Clipper missions currently under development for exploration of the Jupiter system.
Tilman Spohn is a planetary scientist at the International Space Science Institute in Bern, Switzerland. His work focuses on modelling the interior structure and thermal evolution of planets and icy satellites, with a particular emphasis on their cores and magnetic field generation. He has led instrument teams on the NASA InSight mission to Mars and the ESA Rosetta mission to comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko. He is an American Geophysical Union Fellow and a recipient of the Runcorn-Florensky medal, awarded by the European Geosciences Union for exceptional