Juno perijove 6, May 19, 2017 |
Juno perijove 6, May 19, 2017 |
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Senior Member ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 2346 Joined: 7-December 12 Member No.: 6780 ![]() |
Voting for Perijove 06 started yesterday, and it will last for another almost 7 days.
This time, I'm not quite free of bias, since I'm interested in an extension of the polar time-lapse sequence, especially in a coverage of the north and south polar FFRs and the presumed edge of the respective polar haze disks. I think - well, I'm rather certain - that it's possible to infer short-time dynamics of the FFRs, and of the vortices near the edge of the haze disk. Due to the expected good contact to Earth during the PJ-6 pass we have a good chance to obtain overlapping images of these regions. More in the discussion section on the missionjuno site. Of course, there are other interesting targets, too; see Glenn's and John Rogers' (Philosophia-47) comments. A full latitude coverage would allow for a pole-to-pole animation. |
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Senior Member ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 2346 Joined: 7-December 12 Member No.: 6780 ![]() |
At least some of the Jupiter images are already in the TPS image library.
Here search results for Seán and me. Someone at TPS seems to select some images, occasionally. Initially Emily has been working hard on this. I know, that she has several jobs now, and I'm not quite up to data, whether she currently has time to maintain the database herself. I'm also using to upload some selected images to the missionjuno site, where I hope, that the images will persist for a few years, at least. And some images have been selected as APODs or for NASA's PIA. I'm hosting most of my image products on the junocam.pictures webspace, which my provider will hopefully be able to keep online over the next several years. I've a local copy of this site, in case the site will be shut down for some reason. So, I hope, that we have sufficient redundancy, that not everything will go lost. I'm open for additional archiving concepts. Technically, the upload limit in UMSF can be increased. But we may get 10s or even 100s of gigabytes of JunoCam image products over time. I'm currently prepared for up to 500 GB on my webspace, about 10 GB per perijove plus some margin. But I guess, this load would be above reasonable restrictions for UMSF. And only a small subset of my image products looks "pretty" or is intended to look pretty, or is even valid for public attention. |
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