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Galileo images and mosaics of Jupiter
Bjorn Jonsson
post Dec 7 2015, 04:19 PM
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20 years ago today, NASA's Galileo spacecraft entered orbit around Jupiter after a successful Jupiter Orbit Insertion burn that lasted 49 minutes.

Due to the failure of the high gain antenna (HGA) deployment the amount of data the spacecraft returned was severely limited and many of the images exhibit 'JPG-like' compression artifacts. Despite this there are many gems in the Galileo imagery.

Below are three 3x2 'anniversary image mosaics' of the Great Red Spot (GRS) that Galileo obtained during its first orbit of Jupiter on June 26, 1996. They are based on data obtained through two filters, a 756 nm near infrared filter and a violet filter. In these images, color and contrast have been exaggerated to enhance the visibility of various features and the images have been processed with an unsharp mask to more clearly show small scale features. The images show the GRS from the spacecraft's vantage point, i.e. they are not map projected. The viewing geometry is also shown.

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In the first image, Galileo was 1.8 million km from Jupiter and the resolution of the original images is ~36 km/pixel. In the other two cases, Galileo was 1.5 million km from Jupiter and the original image resolution ~30 km/pixel. The mosaics above are slightly oversampled.

The third image has been seen earlier in 'official versions'; a true color image can be seen here. However, this seems to be a 'quick' version since the color channels are not properly aligned and faint seams are also visible. There is also a well know color version composed from three near-IR wavelengths that can be seen here. It's of higher quality than the true color version.

As indicated above, color and contrast are exaggerated in the above images. Here is a version of the first image with approximately true color and contrast:

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The processing of these images is comparable to the processing of my earlier Voyager mosaics. I started by refining the pointing information and then reprojected everything to simple cylindrical projection. I then created synthetic green maps, used these to create full color maps and then mosaicked the 3x2 color maps into one seamless map. I then rendered the resulting maps to show the GRS from Galileo's vantage point.

There are more gems hidden in the Galileo Jupiter data but these are the best ones of the GRS and possibly the most spectacular Jupiter images obtained throughout the entire mission.

As usual I got rather frustrated when processing these images. I always inevitably start thinking of what the Galileo mission would have been like had the HGA worked. There would probably have been mosaics of the GRS like these (but without compression artifacts) from many/most of Galileo's 30+ orbits but instead, I know of only three orbits with images of the GRS (there might be more - but not a lot). And the images above are the best ones.
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jasedm
post Dec 7 2015, 06:11 PM
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Phenomenal Bjorn - amazing the detail you can draw out of the raw data.

QUOTE (Bjorn Jonsson @ Dec 7 2015, 04:19 PM) *
As usual I got rather frustrated when processing these images. I always inevitably start thinking of what the Galileo mission would have been like had the HGA worked.


Seconded.
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JRehling
post Dec 7 2015, 08:52 PM
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Great work, Bjorn. I was watching on live TV when Galileo's orbital insertion took place, and it kicked off my adult/Internet era interest in space exploration. Thanks for the great reminder! (Actually, better than a reminder, because on the day of the orbital insertion, we only had a boring, yet meaningful, Doppler graph, not a great image like that!)
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Bjorn Jonsson
post Dec 8 2015, 12:03 AM
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QUOTE (JRehling @ Dec 7 2015, 08:52 PM) *
(Actually, better than a reminder, because on the day of the orbital insertion, we only had a boring, yet meaningful, Doppler graph, not a great image like that!)

Yes, things were rather primitive back then but I remember the Jupiter orbit insertion as if it happened yesterday. I was rather nervous because so many things had already gone wrong (in contrast, I was more relaxed during e.g. Cassini's Saturn orbit insertion).

One thing I forgot to mention above is that a significant part of the bottom three violet images was overexposed in the bright, whitish areas towards bottom in each of the mosaics. This made the processing a bit more complicated and also means that the contrast and color in these areas relative to adjacent areas is less accurate than it would be had the violet images not been overexposed (all of the details there come from the 756 nm images).
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tedstryk
post Dec 8 2015, 01:36 AM
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Beautiful! What makes my head hurt is thinking that with the HGA open, those would likely be part of global 8-color mosaics.


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JRehling
post Dec 10 2015, 08:12 PM
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I still think of Cassini in terms of "Galileo minus mishaps" and what it would be like to have the dataset that Cassini could have returned from Jupiter.
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