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Galileo Image of Ganymede
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These images demonstrate the dramatic improvement in the resolution
of pictures that NASA's Galileo spacecraft is returning compared to previous
images of the Jupiter system. The frame at left was taken by the Voyager
2 spacecraft when it flew by in 1979, with a resolution of about 1.3 kilometers
(0.8 mile) per pixel. The frame at right showing the same area was captured
by Galileo during its first flyby of Ganymede on June 27, 1996; it has
a resolution of about 74 meters (243 feet) per pixel, more than 17 times
better than that of the Voyager image. In the Voyager frame, line-like
bright and dark bands can be seen but their detailed structure and origin
are not clear. In the Galileo image, each band is now seen to be composed
of many smaller ridges. The structure and shape of the ridges permit scientists
to determine their origin and their relation to other terrains, helping
to unravel the complex history of the planet-sized moon. In each of these
frames, north is to the top, and the sun illuminates the surface from
the lower left nearly overhead (about 77 degrees above the horizon). The
area shown, at latitude 10 degrees north, 167 degrees west, is about 35
by 55 kilometers (25 by 34 miles). The image was taken June 27 when Galileo
was 7,448 kilometers (4,628 miles) away from Ganymede. The Jet Propulsion
Laboratory manages the Galileo mission for NASA's Office of Space Science.
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