Date: Mon, 22 Jan 2001 14:44:27 -0800 (PST)
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Subject: New Cassini Images Available
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New Cassini Images

http://ciclops.LPL.Arizona.EDU/ciclops/images_jupiter.html
January 22, 2001

Himalia
http://ciclops.lpl.arizona.edu/ciclops/Graphics/himalia.jpg

The brightest of Jupiter's outer satellites, Himalia, was captured and
resolved, for the first time, in a series of narrow angle images taken
on December 19, 2000 from a distance of 4.4 million kilometers during
the brief period when Cassini's attitude was stabilized by thrusters
instead of reaction wheels. This particular 1.0 second exposure was
one of the sharpest, with a resolution of ~ 27 km/pixel, and was taken
through a near-infrared spectral filter at 1:07 UTC (spacecraft time).
The arrow indicates Himalia. North is up. The inset shows the
satellite magnified by a factor of 10 and a graphic indicating
Himalia's size and phase (the sunlight is coming from the left). It is
likely that Himalia is not spherical: it is believed to be a body
captured into orbit around Jupiter and as such, is likely to be an
irregularly shaped asteroid. At the time this image was acquired, the
dimensions of the side of Himalia facing the cameras is roughly 160 km
in the up/down direction.

Credit: NASA/JPL/University of Arizona
Released: January 22, 2001

Io Transit
http://ciclops.lpl.arizona.edu/ciclops/Graphics/bigjupionofilt.jpg

The Galilean satellite Io floats above the cloudtops of Jupiter in
this image captured on the dawn of the new millennium, January 1, 2001
10:00 UTC (spacecraft time), two days after Cassini's closest
approach. The image is deceiving: there are 350,000 kilometers --
roughly 2.5 Jupiters -- between Io and Jupiter's clouds. Io is the
size of our Moon, and Jupiter is very big.

True/False Color
http://ciclops.lpl.arizona.edu/ciclops/Graphics/juptruefalse.jpg

These color composite frames of the mid-section of Jupiter were of
narrow angle images acquired on December 31, 2000, a day after
Cassini's closest approach to the planet. The smallest features in
these frames are roughly ~ 60 kilometers. The left is natural color,
composited to yield the color that Jupiter would have if seen by the
naked eye. The right frame is composed of 3 images: two were taken
through narrow band filters centered on regions of the spectrum where
the gaseous methane in Jupiter's atmosphere absorbs light, and the
third was taken in a red continuum region of the spectrum, where
Jupiter has no absorptions. The combination yields an image whose
colors denote the height of the clouds. Red regions are deep water
clouds, bright blue regions are high haze (like the blue covering the
Great Red Spot). Small, intensely bright white spots are energetic
lightning storms which have penetrated high into the atmosphere where
there is no opportunity for absorption of light: these high cloud
systems reflect all light equally. The darkest blue regions -- for
example, the long linear regions which border the northern part of the
equatorial zone, are the very deep `hot spots', seen in earlier
images, from which Jovian thermal emission is free to escape to space.
This is the first time that global images of Jupiter in all the
methane and attendant continuum filters have been acquired by a
spacecraft. From images like these, the stratigraphy of Jupiter's
dynamic atmosphere will be determined.

Lightning
http://ciclops.lpl.arizona.edu/ciclops/Graphics/light1357.jpg

Day and night side narrow angle images taken on January 1, 2001
illustrating storms visible on the day side which are the sources of
visible lightning when viewed on the night side. The images have been
enhanced in contrast. Note the two day-side occurrences of high
clouds, in the upper and lower parts of the image, are coincident with
lightning storms seen on the dark side. The storms occur at 34.5
degrees and 23.5 degrees North latitude, within one degree of the
latitudes at which similar lightning features were detected by the
Galileo spacecraft. The images were taken at different times. The
storms' longitudinal separation changes from one image to the next
because the winds carrying them blow at different speeds at the two
latitudes.

Methane polarization
http://ciclops.lpl.arizona.edu/ciclops/Graphics/mtpolar.jpg

These images taken through the wide angle camera near closest approach
in the deep near-infrared methane band, combined with filters which
sense electromagnetic radiation of orthogonal polarization, show that
the light from the poles is polarized. That is, the poles appear
bright in one image, and dark in the other. Polarized light is most
readily scattered by aerosols. These images indicate that the aerosol
particles at Jupiter's poles are small and likely consist of
aggregates of even smaller particles, whereas the particles at the
equator and covering the Great Red Spot are larger. Images like these
will allow scientists to ascertain the distribution, size and shape of
aerosols, and consequently, the distribution of heat, in Jupiter's
atmosphere.




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