Jupiter's moon Ganymede, is larger than the planet Mercury!
Ganymede Is Bigger Than Mercury (But Half Its Weight!)
When we think of moons, we imagine small rocky satellites dutifully orbiting their parent planets. But Ganymede didn't get the memo. This massive moon circling Jupiter is larger than the entire planet Mercury, measuring 5,268 kilometers (3,273 miles) in diameter compared to Mercury's modest 4,880 kilometers (3,030 miles).
Let that sink in: a moon is bigger than a planet.
The Largest Moon in the Solar System
Ganymede doesn't just edge out Mercury—it dominates the moon league. It's the heavyweight champion of all 200+ moons in our solar system, outclassing even Saturn's famous Titan and Neptune's Triton.
If Ganymede orbited the Sun instead of Jupiter, we'd absolutely call it a planet. At 8% larger than Mercury, it has the credentials. But because it orbits another planet, it's relegated to "moon" status—the ultimate cosmic technicality.
Bigger, But Not Heavier
Here's where it gets weird. Despite being larger, Ganymede is only 45% of Mercury's mass. How is that possible?
Density. Mercury is a dense ball of iron and rock—it's basically a giant metal core with a thin rocky shell. Ganymede, by contrast, is roughly half water ice and half rocky material. It's like comparing a bowling ball to a beach ball: one is bigger, but the other is much heavier.
This low density gives Ganymede its classification as an "icy moon," and it means that if you could stand on Ganymede's surface, you'd weigh less than you would on Mercury, despite the moon's larger size.
A Moon With Its Own Magnetic Field
Ganymede has another trick up its sleeve: it's the only moon in the solar system with its own magnetic field. Scientists believe this is generated by a liquid iron core deep beneath its icy surface—making Ganymede more planet-like than many actual planets.
This magnetic field creates auroras at Ganymede's poles, similar to Earth's Northern and Southern Lights. NASA's Hubble Space Telescope has captured these shimmering displays, adding yet another "planet-like" feature to this overachieving moon.
Could Ganymede Harbor Life?
Beneath Ganymede's icy crust lies a secret: a subsurface ocean containing more water than all of Earth's oceans combined. This hidden ocean, sandwiched between layers of ice, is one of the prime candidates in the search for extraterrestrial life.
The European Space Agency's JUICE mission (Jupiter Icy Moons Explorer), launched in 2023, will arrive at Jupiter in 2031 to study Ganymede in unprecedented detail. Scientists want to know: could this giant moon harbor life in its dark, deep ocean?
So while Mercury bakes in the Sun's intense heat, Ganymede quietly orbits Jupiter with its own magnetic field, hidden ocean, and the title of largest moon in the solar system. Not bad for something we call a "satellite."