Pluto’s Closeup Will Be Awesome Based On Jupiter Pics From New Horizons Spacecraft
by Elizabeth Howell
on December 2, 2014
A
montage of images taken of Jupiter and its moon Io (foreground) by the
New Horizons mission in 2007. Jupiter is shown in infrared wavelengths
while Io is close to true-color. On top of Io is an eruption from the
volcano Tvashtar. Credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics
Laboratory/Southwest Research Institute
New Horizons, you gotta wake up this weekend. There’s so much work
ahead of you when you reach Pluto next year! The spacecraft has been
sleeping quietly for weeks in its last great hibernation before the
dwarf planet close encounter in July. On Saturday (Dec. 6), the NASA
craft will
open its eyes and begin preparations for that flyby.
How cool will those closeups of Pluto and its moons look? A hint
comes from a swing New Horizons took by Jupiter in 2007 en route. It
caught a huge volcanic plume erupting off of the moon Io, picked up new
details in Jupiter’s atmosphere and gave scientists a close-up of a
mysterious “Little Red Spot.” Get a taste of the fun seven years ago in
the gallery below.
An
eruption from the Tvashtar volcano on Io, Jupiter’s moon, in several
different wavelength images taken by the New Horizons spacecraft in
2007. The left image from the Long Range Reconnaissance Imager (LORRI)
shows lava glowing in the night. At top right, the Multispectral Visible
Imaging Camera (MVIC) spotted sulfur and sulfor dioxide deposits on the
sunny side of Io. The remaining image from the Linear Etalon Imaging
Spectral Array (LEISA) shows volcanic hotspots on Io’s surface. Credit:
NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory/Southwest
Research Institute
Jupiter’s
“Little Red Spot” seen by the New Horizons spacecraft in 2007. The spot
turned red in 2005 for reasons scientists were then unsure of, but
speculated it could be due to stuff from inside the atmosphere being
stirred up by a storm surge. Credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins University
Applied Physics Laboratory/Southwest Research Institute
A
“family portrait” of the four Galilean satellites around Jupiter taken
by the New Horizons spacecraft and released in 2007. From left, the
montage includes Io, Europa, Ganymede and Callisto. Credit: NASA/Johns
Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory/Southwest Research
Institute
A
composite of Jupiter’s bands (and atmospheric structures) taken in
several images by the New Horizons Multispectral Visual Imaging Camera,
showing differences due to sunlight and wind. Credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins
University Applied Physics Laboratory/Southwest Research Institute
In
February and March 2007, a huge plume erupted from the Tvashtar volcano
on Jupiter’s moon Io. The image sequence taken by New Horizons showed
the largest such explosion then viewed by a spacecraft — even accounting
for the Galileo spacecraft that examined Io between 1996 and 2001.
Credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics
Laboratory/Southwest Research Institute
The
New Horizons flyby of Io in 2007 (right) revealed a changing feature on
the surface of the Jupiter moon since Galileo’s image of 1999 (left.)
Inside the circle, a new volcanic eruption spewed material; other
pictures showed this region was still active. Credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins
University Applied Physics Laboratory/Southwest Research Institute
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