| False Color Moon |
Original Caption Released with Image:
These color visualizations of the Moon were obtained by the Galileo spacecraft
as it left the Earth after completing its first Earth Gravity Assist. The
image on the right was acquired at 6:47 p.m. PST Dec. 8, l990, from a distance
of almost 220,000 miles, while that on the left was obtained at 9:35 a.m. PST
Dec. 9, at a range of more than 350,000 miles. On the right, the near side of
the Moon and about 30 degrees of the far side (left edge) are visible. In the
full disk on the left, a little less than half the near side and more than
half the far side (to the right) are visible. The color composites used images
taken through the violet and two near infrared filters.
The visualizations depict spectral properties of the lunar surface known from
analysis of returned samples to be related to composition or weathering of
surface materials. The greenish-blue region at the upper right in the full
disk and the upper part of the right hand picture is Oceanus Procellarum. The
deeper blue mare regions here and elsewhere are relatively rich in titanium,
while the greens, yellows and light oranges indicate basalts low in titanium
but rich in iron and magnesium. The reds (deep orange in the right hand
picture) are typically cratered highlands relatively poor in titanium, iron
and magnesium. In the full disk picture on the left, the yellowish area to the
south is part of the newly confirmed South Pole Aitken basin, a large circular
depression some 1,200 miles across, perhaps rich in iron and magnesium.
Analysis of Apollo lunar samples provided the basis for calibration of this
spectral map; Galileo data, in turn, permit broad extrapolation of the Apollo
based composition information, reaching ultimately to the far side of the Moon.