Io: Rare Hubble Portrait of Io and Jupiter | PIA01258 | ||
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This image, shows Jupiter's volcanic moon Io passing above the turbulent clouds of the giant planet, on July 24, 1996. The conspicuous black spot on Jupiter is Io's shadow. | ||
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Image Credit: J. Spencer (Lowell Observatory), and NASA | |||
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This
image, shows Jupiter's volcanic moon Io passing above the turbulent clouds
of the giant planet, on July 24, 1996. The conspicuous black spot on Jupiter
is Io's shadow. The shadow is about the size of Io and sweeps across the
face of Jupiter at 17 kilometers per second. The smallest details visible on Io and Jupiter are about 100 miles across. Bright patches visible on Io are regions of sulfur dioxide frost. Io is roughly the size of Earth's moon, but 2,000 times farther away. |
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This
is one of a series of images of Io taken by Hubble to complement the close-up
images currently being taken by the Galileo spacecraft now orbiting Jupiter.
Though the Galileo images show much finer detail, Hubble provides complementary
information because it can observe Io at ultraviolet wavelengths not seen
by Galileo, can observe Io at different times than Galileo, and can view
Io under more consistent viewing conditions. The image was taken at violet wavelengths, with the Wide Field Planetary Camera 2, in PC mode. |
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