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IMAGE PROCESSING GALLERY

Welcome! PJ–1 Images Gallery Organization About JunoCam Images
Welcome!
This is where we post raw images from JunoCam. We invite you to download them, do your own image processing, and we encourage you to upload your creations for us to enjoy and share. The types of image processing we’d love to see range from simply cropping an image to highlighting a particular atmospheric feature, as well as adding your own color enhancements, creating collages and adding advanced color reconstruction.

One of the biggest challenges for Juno is Jupiter's intense radiation belts, which are expected to limit the lifetime of both Juno’s engineering and science subsystems. JunoCam is now showing the effects of that radiation on some of its parts.  PJ56 images show a reduction in our dynamic range and an increase in background and noise. We invite citizen scientists to explore new ways to process these images to continue to bring out the beauty and mysteries of Jupiter and its moons.

For those of you who have contributed – thank you! Your labors of love have illustrated articles about Juno, Jupiter and JunoCam. Your products show up in all sorts of places.  We have used them to report to the scientific community. We are writing papers for scientific journals and using your contributions – always with appropriate attribution of course. Some creations are works of art and we are working out ways to showcase them as art.
PJ–1 Images
The first perijove pass of Jupiter was a test run for JunoCam. The set of 28 images taken were designed to find optimal viewing geometries and camera settings. For example, we took 4 images of the north pole. We used two different settings for the time-delayed-integration (TDI), which determines the integration time, to see which would be best for the polar region and a very high TDI level (long exposure) to try to detect Jupiter’s aurora. We imaged at two different geometries, looking directly down at the pole and looking at closest range at a more oblique angle, to see which would give us the best results. We ran through a similar set of tests for the south pole. Another comparison we made was to test different compression settings.

We have a methane filter, included for the polar science investigation, that is almost at the limits of our detector’s wavelength range. To get enough photons for an image we need to use a very long exposure. In some images this results in scattered light in the image.  For science purposes we will simply crop out the portions of the image that include this artifact. Work is in progress to determine exactly what conditions cause stray light problems so that this can be minimized for future imaging.
Gallery Organization
The gallery displays images from JunoCam itself, as well as uploads from the community. 

The JunoCam images are identified by a small spacecraft icon. You will see both raw and processed versions of the images as they become available. The JunoCam movie posts have too many images to post individually, so we are making  them available for download in batches as zip files.

You can filter the gallery by many different characteristics, including by Perijove Pass, Points of Interest and Mission Phase. If you have a favorite “artist” you can create your own gallery.  Click on “Submitted by” on the left, select your favorite artist(s), and then click on “Filter”.

A special note about the Earth Flyby mission phase images: these were acquired in 2013 when Juno flew past Earth. Examples of processed images are shown; most contributions are from amateurs.
About JunoCam Images
Like previous MSSS cameras (e.g., Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter’s Mars Color Imager) Junocam is a "pushframe" imager. The detector has multiple filter strips, each with a different bandpass, bonded directly to its photoactive surface. Each strip extends the entire width of the detector, but only a fraction of its height; Junocam's filter strips are 1600 pixels wide and about 155 rows high. The filter strips are scanned across the target by spacecraft rotation. At the nominal spin rate of 2 RPM, frames are acquired about every 400 milliseconds. Junocam has four filters: three visible (red/green/blue) and a narrowband "methane" filter centered at about 890 nm. 

The spacecraft spin rate would cause more than a pixel's worth of image blurring for exposures longer than about 3.2 milliseconds. For the illumination conditions at Jupiter such short exposures would result in unacceptably low SNR, so the camera provides Time-Delayed-Integration (TDI). TDI vertically shifts the image one row each 3.2 milliseconds over the course of the exposure, cancelling the scene motion induced by rotation. Up to about 100 TDI steps can be used for the orbital timing case while still maintaining the needed frame rate for frame-to-frame overlap. For Earth Flyby the light levels are high enough that TDI is not needed except for the methane band and for nightside imaging.  

Junocam pixels are 12 bits deep from the camera but are converted to 8 bits inside the instrument using a lossless "companding" table, a process similar to gamma correction, to reduce their size.  All Junocam products on the missionjuno website are in this 8-bit form as received on Earth.  Scientific users interested in radiometric analysis should use the "RDR" data products archived with the Planetary Data System, which have been converted back to a linear 12-bit scale.

We invite you to download raw JunoCam images posted here and do your own image processing on them. Be creative! Anything from cropping to color enhancing to collaging is fair game. Then upload your creations here.

Please refrain from direct use of any official NASA or Juno mission logos in your work, as this confuses what is officially sanctioned by NASA and by the Juno Project.

We ask that you refrain from posting any patently offensive, political, or inappropriate images. Let’s keep it clean and fun for everyone of any age! Remember, this section is moderated so inappropriate content will be rejected. But creativity and curiosity in the scientific spirit and the adventure of space exploration is highly encouraged and we look forward to seeing Jupiter through not only JunoCam’s eyes, but your own. Have at it!

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Points of Interest
credit : NASA
LITTLE GREENISH PLACE
Roswitha-62
Polar Anaglyph
credit : NASA / SwRI / MSSS / Kevin Baird
LITTLE GREENISH PLACE
Roswitha-62
Oceans of Jupiter
credit : Erin Quinn
LITTLE GREENISH PLACE
Roswitha-62
Storm planet
credit : LeusMoC
Pillar / The Storm
credit : Juno/Lee Gingold
Juno's Eye
credit : NASA / SwRI / MSSS / Gerald Eichstädt / Justin Cowart
Great Red Spot Closeup
credit : NASA/SwRI/MSSS/Shawn Handran
Magesty gases in the atmosphere
credit : LeusMoC
Viyazhan Kann - Jupiter's Eye in Tamil
credit : Akash Anandh
Great Red Spot Channels
SAF-67
Great Red Spot
credit : Chris Larson
The Great Red Spot and Tea Seashores
credit : NASA/SwRI/MSSS/Shawn Handran
First try at Juno Image editing
Qiaochuyuan-93
Joshualevine-41
Surreal Swirls
credit : J. King (Color Enhancement)
Jupiter is not amused.
credit : Tara Leonard
Great red spot, merged from individual RGB raw images
credit : NASA / SwRI / MSSS / Stefano Ivan Stinga
Approaching the Great Red Spot
credit : NASA / SwRI / MSSS / Gerald Eichstädt / Justin Cowart
jupiter colors
credit : @andarilhosolitario
Beautiful color ranges
credit : Tara Leonard
GIMP Processed
credit : Daniel Smania
Approach
credit : Joe Marfia
RAFA
Rafa-007
FEAR
Rafa-007
GBS - RLP 01
Rafa-007
Juicy Jupiter
credit : NASA!
The big red tumultuous dot
Kharlamov-503
Great Red Spot: JunoCam Perijove 7
credit : NASA / SwRI / MSSS / Gerald Eichstädt / Marty McGuire
3D speculation of Red Spot based on JunoCam image.
credit : Ted Mahler / NASA Image
Big Red Eye Storm
credit : Riza Miftah Muharram
Izzard-69
High storms
credit : Wesley Oliveira de Paula - OJ_weslley
The Many Eyes of Jupiter
credit : Terry Riopka
Great Red Spot is GREAT!
credit : Riza Miftah Muharram
An enhanced image of the POI: Tan Seashore 7_11_17_2:12UT
credit : Jon Mandell
Redspot
Alexboginski
Alexboginski
DrYattz visits the spot
Kincsem-42
If the GRS were blue...
credit : Dave Johnson
Found a streak below the red eye while editing today's Juno images
Iku-Turso-16
Great Red Spot
credit : Victor Lazarus
Jupiter Enhanced processing
credit : Michael Schneider
Juno and High Exposition
credit : oj_weslley
Jupiter south pole cropped
Payton-81
Jupiter South Pole Glow
Payton-81
Jupiter Texture M.A
credit : Carlos Martins
credit : Adrian Mendoza
Red Jupiter M.A
credit : Carlos Martins
Red Spot Perijove 7 Detail
credit : JPL Nasa/Swri/MSSS/JunoCam/Carlos Galeano - Cosmonautika
Marygardner-30
GRS Wispy Clouds
credit : Ralph Woodin
South Pole (Low Emission Angle) with Methane Filter (CH4)
credit : Laura Stevens
Red eye
Elvio_Brosovitzki
Roman Zeus
credit : Jos Piriz
Red Spot
DaemonGPF
Jupiter's Great Red Spot view from Juno spacecraft
credit : Phablo Araujo / Universidade Federal de Goiás
Red Spot Of Jupiter
credit : NASA / SwRI / MSSS / Gerald Eichstädt / Tom Smith
Great Red Spot
credit : NASA / SwRI / MSSS / Kevin M Gill /Tom Smith
Watchful Eye
credit : Tom Momary's edit for original base. "Sleepy Eye"
New perspective
Elvio_Brosovitzki
The Cloudy Giant
credit : Daniela Bustamante
Jupiter@12652
JasonKru82
Red Spot
credit : Mioch
Eye of the storm
credit : STB
Great Red Spot
credit : Soumya Nanda
Up close and personal
Ebella-27
Jupiter Enhanced
credit : Soumya Nanda
Bradbury-80
Purple Shores
credit : Blake Dollens
Shannon261
Shannon261
credit : ANDREGON
Jupiter Great Red Spot view by Juno
credit : Phablo Araujo / Universidade Federal de Goiás
Looking into the Eye of a Monster
credit : NASA/SwRI/MSSS/Michael Galindo
GRS Polar Inversion
credit : Ralph Woodin
Great Red Spot
credit : Cionki @ EITSA
Juno Eye Enhanced v8
credit : Brian Swift
JUPITER'S MANY COLORS
Zeeman-18
The Large "B&W" Spot
credit : MarcoArcaico
Red Spot Enhanced v8
credit : Brian Swift
P7 Great Red Spot
d'Alembert-30
Beavis01
POI's: Lower Great Red Spot Atmospheric Flow, Fractured Boundary
credit : NASA / JPL / SwRI / MSSS / Gerald Eichstädt
The Storm that Glows
credit : Original image - NASA/Photo Edit Val Oliver
Leon
POI's: mortyland, spot turbulance
credit : NASA / JPL / SwRI / MSSS / Gerald Eichstädt
POI's: Hot Spot Tail, HotSpot
credit : NASA / JPL / SwRI / MSSS / Gerald Eichstädt
Great Red Spot
credit : Taken by Juno probe, enhanced by Richie P.
Approaching The Great Red Spot
credit : NASA/SwRI/MSSS/Michael Galindo
POI: Complex High Contrast
credit : NASA / JPL / SwRI / MSSS / Gerald Eichstädt
POI: White spot b
credit : NASA / JPL / SwRI / MSSS / Gerald Eichstädt
POI's: Flower Moon, Dark Clouds
credit : NASA / JPL / SwRI / MSSS / Gerald Eichstädt
Poles Apart
credit : Darkinc1
Disturbances below the large red spot
credit : Jonatã Oliveira
POI: Juno eye
credit : NASA / JPL / SwRI / MSSS / Gerald Eichstädt
credit : Nicoletta Minichino
North Pole at Minimum Emission Angle
credit : NASA / JPL / SwRI / MSSS / Gerald Eichstädt
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