Io's shadow: Simulating the view from a consumer type camera

2019-09-24 22:01 UT
Credit : NASA / JPL-Caltech / SwRI / MSSS / Björn Jónsson © cc nc sa
Submitted By : Bjorn_Jonsson
Mission Phase : PERIJOVE 22
Source Image(s) : JNCE_2019255_22C00028_V01

When Juno acquired its highest resolution images of Io's shadow it was very close to Jupiter. The altitude above the cloud tops was less than 8,000 km whereas Jupiter's equatorial diameter is about 143,000 km. As a result you wouldn't be able to see all of Jupiter huge globe at the same time from this altitude. To see all of it you would need to look around you in different directions. For the same reason it would be impossible to capture all of Jupiter in a single image with a 'typical' camera unless a special type of lens was used (a fisheye lens).

This approximately true color/contrast image shows what Jupiter and Io's shadow might have looked like to a typical consumer type camera (or even a phone) from Juno's location when JunoCam image PJ22_28 was obtained. The field of view is roughly comparable to the result from a typical consumer camera when no zoom is used. North is to the upper left. The distance to the center of Io's shadow is about 12,000 km.