| Gaspra - True and Enhanced Color |
Original Caption Released with Image:
These two color views of the asteroid Gaspra were produced by combining
three images taken through violet, green, and infrared filters by the Galileo
spacecraft on October 29, 1991, from a distance of about 16,000 kilometers
(10,000 miles). The view on the left shows Gaspra in approximately true
color; the surface is covered with rocks that are somewhat less grey than those
on Earth's moon. In the version on the right, the colors were enhanced to bring
out the muted color variations on the asteroid and to increase the ability to
discriminate between surface features. The subtle variations in color may be
due to slight differences in rock composition or to differences in the texture
of the surface layer. These possibilities should be resolved once the rest of
Galileo's Gaspra data are played back in 1992. Gaspra is about 19 by 12 by 11
kilometers (12 by 7.4 by 7 miles) and irregular in shape. The illuminated
portion seen in these views is about 16 by 12 kilometers. These color images
were produced for the Galileo project by the U.S. Geological survey,
Flagstaff, Arizona. The Galileo project whose primary mission is the
exploration of the Jupiter system in 1995-97, is managed for NASA's Office
of Space Science and Applications by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory.