Jupiter's south polar region II

2018-01-11 18:27 UT
Credit : NASA / JPL-Caltech / SwRI / MSSS / Björn Jónsson © cc nc sa
Submitted By : Bjorn_Jonsson

Due to Jupiter's low axial tilt (3.1°), seasons are almost absent on Jupiter and we never see more than roughly one half of the area around the poles in sunlight at any given time.

For Jupiter, this makes views like the Cassini images of Saturn that show large areas around the poles in sunlight impossible. However, they can be simulated. This is a simulated view that shows what an image of Jupiter from a Cassini-style imaging system would look like near southern summer solstice if Jupiter's axial tilt was similar to Saturn's (26.7°). A large area around the south pole is illuminated.

This image is based on JunoCam images obtained during perijoves 6, 7 and 8 that have been mosaicked to cover the entire south polar region. Here the "subspacecraft latitude" is 65 degrees south. This is an approximately true color/contrast view.