 |
      
      
  

  
|
|
Ganymede's Galileo Regio Region
[238k]
A mosaic of four Galileo images of the Galileo Regio region on Ganymede
(Latitude 18 N, Longitude: 149 W) is shown overlayed on the data obtained
by the Voyager 2 spacecraft in 1979. North is to the top of the picture,
and the sun illuminates the surface from the lower left, about 58 degrees
above the horizon. The smallest features that can be discerned are about
80 meters (262 feet) in size in the Galileo images. These Galileo images
show fine details of the dark terrain that makes up about half of the
surface of the planet-sized moon. Ancient impact craters of various sizes
and states of degradation testify to the great age of the terrain, dating
back several billion years. The images reveal distinctive variations in
albedo from the brighter rims, knobs, and furrow walls to a possible accumulation
of dark material on the lower slopes, and crater floors. High photometric
activity (large light contrast at high spatial frequencies) of this ice-rich
surface was such that the Galileo camera's hardware data compressor was
pushed into truncating lines. The north-south running gap between the
left and right halves of the mosaic is a result of line truncation from
the normal 800 samples per line to about 540. The images were taken on
27 June, 1996 Universal Time at a range of 7,580 kilometers (4,738 miles)
through the clear filter of the Galileo spacecraft's imaging system.
|
|