
| NASA Center: |
Jet Propulsion Laboratory |
| Image # : |
PIA02308 |
| Date : |
08/27/1999
|
|---|
|
Title
Global Image of Io
Full Description
NASA's Galileo spacecraft acquired its highest resolution images of
Jupiter's moon Io on July 3, 1999 during its closest pass to Io since
orbit insertion in late 1995. This color mosaic uses the near-infrared,
green and violet filters (slightly more than the visible range) of the
spacecraft's camera and approximates what the human eye would see.
Most of Io's surface has pastel colors, punctuated by black, brown,
green, orange, and red units near the active volcanic centers. A false
color version of the mosaic has been created to enhance the contrast
of the color variations. The improved resolution reveals small-scale
color units which had not been recognized previously and which suggest
that the lavas and sulfurous deposits are composed of complex mixtures.
Some of the bright (whitish), high-latitude (near the top and bottom)
deposits have an ethereal quality like a transparent covering of frost. Bright
red areas were seen previously only as diffuse deposits. However, they are now
seen to exist as both diffuse deposits and sharp linear features like fissures.
Some volcanic centers have bright and colorful flows, perhaps due to flows of
sulfur rather than silicate lava. In this region bright, white material can
also be seen to emanate from linear rifts and cliffs.
Comparison of this image to previous Galileo images reveals many
changes due to the ongoing volcanic activity. North is towards the top
of the picture and the sun illuminates the surface from almost directly
behind the spacecraft. This illumination geometry is good for imaging
color variations, but poor for imaging topographic shading. However,
some topographic shading can be seen here due to the combination of
relatively high resolution (1.3 kilometers or 0.8 miles per picture
element) and the rugged topography over parts of Io.
The image is centered at 0.3 degrees north latitude and 137.5 degrees
west longitude. The resolution is 1.3 kilometers (0.8 miles) per
picture element. The images were taken on July 3, 1999 at a range of
about 130,000 kilometers (81,000 miles) by the Solid State Imaging
(SSI) system on NASA's Galileo spacecraft during its twenty-first
orbit.
The Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, California manages the Galileo
mission for NASA's Office of Space Science, Washington, DC.
Keywords
Jet Propulsion Laboratory JPL Galileo Io
Subject Category
Jupiters Moons, Voyager-Galileo,
Reference Numbers
- Center:
JPL
- Center Number:
PIA02308
- GRIN DataBase Number:
GPN-2000-000419
Source Information
- Creator/Photographer: NASA
- Original Source: DIGITAL
| Resolution | Format | Width (Pixels) | Height (Pixels) | Size (KBytes) |
Thumbnail |
.jpg |
84 |
84 |
15 |
Small |
.jpg |
596 |
596 |
283 |
Medium |
.jpg |
1398 |
1398 |
1,308 |
Large |
.jpg |
2796 |
2796 |
4,896 |
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Updated October 31, 2002
History Questions: NASA History Office
Responsible NASA Official: Steve Garber
Author: Michael Hahn. Editor: Dwayne A. Day
Curator & Technical Questions: Erin Needham
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