Moon--- False Color Mosaic |
Original Caption Released with Image:
This false-color mosaic was constructed from a series of 53 images taken
through three spectral filters by Galileo's imaging system as the spacecraft
flew over the northern regions of the Moon on December 7, 1992. The part of
the Moon visible from Earth is on the left side in this view. The color mosaic
shows compositional variations in parts of the Moon's northern hemisphere.
Bright pinkish areas are highlands materials, such as those surrounding the
oval lava-filled Crisium impact basin toward the bottom of the picture. Blue
to orange shades indicate volcanic lava flows. To the left of Crisium, the
dark blue Mare Tranquillitatis is richer in titanium than the green and orange
maria above it. Thin mineral-rich soils associated with relatively recent
impacts are represented by light blue colors; the youngest craters have
prominent blue rays extending from them. 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.
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Galileo Solid State Imaging Team Leader: Dr. Michael J. S. Belton
The SSI Education and Public Outreach webpages were originally created and
managed by Matthew Fishburn and Elizabeth Alvarez with significant assistance
from Kelly Bender, Ross Beyer, Detrick Branston, Stephanie Lyons, Eileen Ryan,
and Nalin Samarasinha.
Last updated: September 17, 1999, by Matthew Fishburn
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Website Curator: Leslie Lowes
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