Note: Click on Solar System Exploration: Galileo Legacy Site (NASA-JPL) to get this image at its highest resolution.
View of the north pole region of the Moon with north pole to the lower left
(not visible in this picture) of this mosaic of images.
The view in the upper left is toward the horizon across the volcanic lava
plains of Mare Imbrium.
The prominent crater with the central peak is Pythagoras, an impact crater
some 130 kilometers (80 miles) in diameter.
December 7 and 8, 1992. Range, 121,000 kilometers (75,000 miles).
This image was taken through the violet filter of Galileo's imaging system
during Galileo's second, and final, flyby of the Earth-Moon system.
According to team scientists, the viewing geometry that resulted as the
spacecraft passed over the lunar north pole and the low sun-angle
illumination provided a unique opportunity to assess the geologic
relationships among the smooth plains, cratered terrain and impact ejecta
deposits in this region of the Moon.
Galileo's images of the Moon are similar in resolution to the pictures the
Voyager Mission spacecrafts took of Jupiter's moons.
However, when Galileo reaches Jupiter, it will be ten, even several hundred
times closer to Jupiter's moons than the Voyager Mission was.
This means that Galileo's images of the Jovian moons will have a resolution
hundreds of times better than that seen in these pictures of our Moon.
Next slide: Earth-Moon Conjunction
Back to: Galileo To Jupiter
Link to: Solar System Exploration: Galileo Legacy Site (NASA - JPL)
Updated: October 8 '96
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