 |
      
      
  

  
|
|
False Color Image of Jupiter's Great Red Spot
[54k]
False color representation of Jupiter's Great Red Spot (GRS) taken through
three different near-infrared filters of the Galileo imaging system and
processed to reveal cloud top height. Images taken through Galileo's near-infrared
filters record sunlight beyond the visible range that penetrates to different
depths in Jupiter's atmosphere before being reflected by clouds. The Great
Red Spot appears pink and the surrounding region blue because of the particular
color coding used in this representation. Light reflected by Jupiter at
a wavelength (886 nm) where methane strongly absorbs is shown in red.
Due to this absorption, only high clouds can reflect sunlight in this
wavelength. Reflected light at a wavelength (732 nm) where methane absorbs
less strongly is shown in green. Lower clouds can reflect sunlight in
this wavelength. Reflected light at a wavelength (757 nm) where there
are essentially no absorbers in the Jovian atmosphere is shown in blue:
This light is reflected from the deepest clouds. Thus, the color of a
cloud in this image indicates its height. Blue or black areas are deep
clouds; pink areas are high, thin hazes; white areas are high, thick clouds.
This image shows the Great Red Spot to be relatively high, as are some
smaller clouds to the northeast and northwest that are surprisingly like
towering thunderstorms found on Earth. The deepest clouds are in the collar
surrounding the Great Red Spot, and also just to the northwest of the
high (bright) cloud in the northwest corner of the image. Preliminary
modelling shows these cloud heights vary over 30 km in altitude. This
mosaic, of eighteen images (6 in each filter) taken over a 6 minute interval
during the second GRS observing sequence on June 26, 1996, has been map-projected
to a uniform grid of latitude and longitude. North is at the top.
Launched in October 1989, Galileo entered orbit around Jupiter on December
7, 1995. The spacecraft's mission is to conduct detailed studies of the
giant planet, its largest moons and the Jovian magnetic environment.
|
|