Twelve Views of Io from Juno's PJ53 encounter

2023-08-03 02:53 UT
Credit : NASA / SwRI / MSSS / Jason Perry © cc by
Submitted By : JasonPerry
Mission Phase : PERIJOVE 53

This montage of twelve images of JunoCam of Jupiter's moon Io represent some of the highest-resolution views taken of the volcanic moon since the New Horizons encounter in 2007. They reveal a colorful landscape across Io's northern hemisphere filled with active lava flows, yellow, red, and green sulfurous deposits, and tall silicate mountains. Some of these features were not seen by previous missions to Io. These include the mountains seen near Io's north pole, many surrounded by bright halos of sulfur dioxide frost. Several surface changes are apparent, when comparing the images with Galileo and New Horizons data, including new flows at Volund and East Girru, and a red fan-like deposit surrounding Chors Patera.

The highest resolution image (second image in the middle row) was acquired from a distance of 22,243 kilometers (13,821 miles) and has a pixel scale of 15 kilomters (9.3 miles) per pixel. These twelve images were acquired over a period of 50 minutes on July 31, 2023. Io's north pole is located just below the mountain in the center of the fourth image in the middle row.