Five new images taken by the Galileo spacecraft as it
continues its tour of the Jovian system are now available on the
World Wide Web.
Aurora Borealis on Jupiter

Two of the images show the Jovian equivalent of an "aurora
borealis," or what is called the "northern lights" or "southern
lights" here on Earth. Auroras create vivid curtains of light in
the northern and southern hemispheres when the solar wind
collides with Earth's magnetic field.
Jupiter's Belt Zone Boundary
These images were taken on November 5th, 1996, at a range of 1.2 million kilometers by the Solid State Imaging system aboard NASA's Galileo spacecraft.
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False-color mosaic of a belt-zone boundary near Jupiter's equator.
North is at the top. The mosaic covers latitudes -13 to +3 degrees and is centered at longitude
282 degrees West. The smallest resolved features are tens of kilometers in size.
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The images that make up the four quadrants of this mosaic were taken within a few minutes of each
other. Light at each of Galileo's three near-infrared wavelengths is displayed here mapped to
the visible colors red, green, and blue. Light at 886 nanometers, strongly absorbed by atmospheric
methane and scattered from clouds high in the atmosphere, is shown in red. Light at 732 nanometers,
moderately absorbed by atmospheric methane, is shown in green. Light at 757 nanometers,
scattered mostly from Jupiter's lower visible cloud deck, is shown in blue.
The lower cloud deck appears bluish white, while the higher layer appears pinkish.
The holes in the upper layer and their relationships to features in the lower cloud deck can
be studied in the lower half of the mosaic.
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The edge of the planet runs along the right side of the mosaic. North is at the top.
The mosaic covers latitudes -13 to +3 degrees and is centered at longitude 280 degrees west. The smallest resolved features are tens of kilometers in size. |
Jupiter's Moon Callisto

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A portion of a chain of impact craters on Jupiter's moon Callisto is seen in this image taken by the Galileo spacecraft on November 4, 1996. This crater chain on Callisto is believed to result from the impact of a split object, similar to the fragments of Comet Shoemaker- Levy 9 which smashed into Jupiter's atmosphere in July of 1994. |
This high- resolution view, taken by Galileo's solid state imaging television camera during its third orbit around Jupiter, is of Callisto's northern hemisphere at 35 degrees north, 46 degrees west, and covers an area of about eight miles (13 kilometers) across. The smallest visible crater is about 140 yards (130 meters) across. The image was taken at a range of 974 miles (1,567 kilometers).
On a global scale, Callisto is heavily cratered, indicating the great age of its surface. At the scale of this image, it was anticipated that the surface would be heavily cratered as well; however, there is a surprising lack of small craters, suggesting that one or more processes have obliterated these and other small-scale features. For example, downslope movement of ice-rich debris could bury small craters. The bright slopes visible in this picture represent places where downslope movement has taken place, exposing fresh ice surfaces.
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