Jupiter's moon Io, its night side illuminated by reflected sunlight from Jupiter, or "Jupitershine." Image data: NASA/JPL-Caltech/SwRI/MSSS Image processing by Emma Wälimäki © CC BY
NASA’s Juno spacecraft just made
the closest flybys of Jupiter’s moon Io that any spacecraft has carried out in more than
20 years. An instrument on this spacecraft called “JunoCam” returned
spectacular, high-resolution images—and raw data are now available
for you to process, enhance, and investigate.
On Dec. 30th, 2023, Juno
came within about 930 miles (1,500 kilometers) of the surface of the solar
system’s most volcanic world. It made a second ultra-close flyby of Io
just this week. The second pass went predominantly over the southern hemisphere
of Io, while prior flybys have been over the north. There’s a lot to see in
these photos! There’s evidence of an active plume, tall mountain peaks with
well-defined shadows, and lava lakes—some with apparent islands.
It will be a challenge to sort
all of this out, and the JunoCam scientists need your help. Previous JunoCam
volunteers like Gerald
Eichstadt have
seen their processed images appear in multiple scientific
publications and press releases.
You can find the new raw images, see the creations of other image processors, and submit your own work at: https://www.missionjuno.swri.edu/junocam/processing.
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