ࡱ;  Root Entry FfUøCompObjbWordDocument ObjectPool9VTø9VTø * !"#$%&'()+,-./0123456789:;<=>?@ABCDEFGHIJKLMN FMicrosoft Word 6.0 Document MSWordDocWord.Document.6; ܥe- e  j jj j j j j  V 1     0 8  T /V j  V j j j j  ~  j j j j  j This photo of Europa, brightest of Jupiter's four Galilean satellites, was taken by Voyager 1 March 2, 1979, from a distance of 1.75 million miles (2.87 million kilometers). In this image a bizarre collection of dark streaks are becoming visible. They are about 30 miles (50 kilometers) wide, and typically 1,200 miles (2,000 kilometers) to 1,800 miles (3,000 kilometers) long. They show a variety of forms: straight, arcuate, linear and branching. Scientists believe they may represent some tectonic system of large fractures or faults. At this resolution it is still too early to tell. In July Voyager 2 will see, at much closer range, the same hemisphere of Europa. JPL manages 'and controls the Voyager project for NASA's Office of Space Science. ࡱ Oh+'0$ H l   D hC:\WORD6\TEMPLATE\NORMAL.DOTThis photo of Io, innermost of the four large Galilean satellites of Jupiter, was taken through an ultraviolSummaryInformation(et filter by the narrow angle camera of Voyager 1. The photo was taken at 2 a.m. (PST) Feb. 27, when Voyager 1 was 4.3 million miles (7 million kPhilip BorgnesPhilip Borgnes@M2ø@@M2ø@Microsoft Word 6.02ࡱ; !K@Normala "A@"Default Paragraph Font  jPhilip BorgnesC:\BILL\1455_032.TXTPhilip BorgnesC:\BILL\1455_045.TXTPhilip BorgnesC:\BILL\1455_034.TXTPhilip BorgnesC:\BILL\1455_048.TXTPhilip BorgnesC:\BILL\1455_037.TXTPhilip BorgnesC:\BILL\1455_038.TXTPhilip BorgnesC:\BILL\1455_011.TXTPhilip BorgnesC:\BILL\1455_016.TXTPhilip BorgnesC:\BILL\1455_018.TXTPhilip BorgnesC:\BILL\1455_028.TXT@HP LaserJet IIPLPT1:HPPCLHP LaserJet IIP  D@GO}#dIALO HP LaserJet IIP  D@GO}#dIALO  UU1Times New Roman Symbol &Arial"hEE"/This photo of Io, innermost of the four large Galilean satellites of Jupiter, was taken through an ultraviolet filter by the narrow angle camera of Voyager 1. The photo was taken at 2 a.m. (PST) Feb. 27, when Voyager 1 was 4.3 million miles (7 million kPhilip BorgnesPhilip Borgnesࡱ; ࡱ;