by Chris Peterson » Wed Nov 29, 2023 4:40 pm
Eclectic Man wrote: βWed Nov 29, 2023 4:33 pm
Chris Peterson wrote: βWed Nov 29, 2023 2:04 pm
Eclectic Man wrote: βWed Nov 29, 2023 12:48 pm
Confused by the illumination of so much of Ganymede's surface. I was assuming that it was illuminated by the Sun, but that would mean only half the surface would be lit, whereas clearly from the image much more than half appears to be lit. Is Ganymede illuminated by Jupiter, or is there some pother explanation?
We don't know how far the camera is from the Moon, so we don't know what percentage of a full hemisphere we're seeing here. But how do you conclude that more than half of the surface is lit? The most we can see is half (and probably much less), and if the spacecraft is between Ganymede and the Sun, all of the visible surface would be lit.
Actually we do know how far the camera is from the moon, according to the data for the three images used to create the composite, the spacecraft altitude was just shy of 1,000,000km, so I would have thought that was far enough away to show the poles, as compared to the view of the Moon from the Earth, however, the terminator in the image does not reach to opposite edges of the disc, so it appears that significantly more than half of Ganymede is illuminated. I guess this is due to the fact that the image is a composite.
See:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/kevinmgill/51238659798/
https://www.missionjuno.swri.edu/junoca ... C00001_V01
https://www.missionjuno.swri.edu/junoca ... C00002_V01
https://www.missionjuno.swri.edu/junoca ... C00003_V01
Even in the separate images 34C00001/2/3 the terminator does not reach opposite points of the disc.
That altitude is its distance from Jupiter, not Ganymede. We are seeing less than a full hemisphere, and the fact that it's a composite makes no difference. The three images were taken over just two minutes (2021-06-07T16:57:20.470, 2021-06-07T16:58:21.048, 2021-06-07T16:59:21.723). Not enough to significantly change the view of the moon.
[quote="Eclectic Man" post_id=335344 time=1701275598 user_id=129639]
[quote="Chris Peterson" post_id=335337 time=1701266655 user_id=117706]
[quote="Eclectic Man" post_id=335335 time=1701262126 user_id=129639]
Confused by the illumination of so much of Ganymede's surface. I was assuming that it was illuminated by the Sun, but that would mean only half the surface would be lit, whereas clearly from the image much more than half appears to be lit. Is Ganymede illuminated by Jupiter, or is there some pother explanation?
[/quote]
We don't know how far the camera is from the Moon, so we don't know what percentage of a full hemisphere we're seeing here. But how do you conclude that more than half of the surface is lit? The most we can see is half (and probably much less), and if the spacecraft is between Ganymede and the Sun, all of the visible surface would be lit.
[/quote]
Actually we do know how far the camera is from the moon, according to the data for the three images used to create the composite, the spacecraft altitude was just shy of 1,000,000km, so I would have thought that was far enough away to show the poles, as compared to the view of the Moon from the Earth, however, the terminator in the image does not reach to opposite edges of the disc, so it appears that significantly more than half of Ganymede is illuminated. I guess this is due to the fact that the image is a composite.
See: https://www.flickr.com/photos/kevinmgill/51238659798/
https://www.missionjuno.swri.edu/junocam/processing?id=JNCE_2021158_34C00001_V01
https://www.missionjuno.swri.edu/junocam/processing?id=JNCE_2021158_34C00002_V01
https://www.missionjuno.swri.edu/junocam/processing?id=JNCE_2021158_34C00003_V01
Even in the separate images 34C00001/2/3 the terminator does not reach opposite points of the disc.
[/quote]
That altitude is its distance from Jupiter, not Ganymede. We are seeing less than a full hemisphere, and the fact that it's a composite makes no difference. The three images were taken over just two minutes (2021-06-07T16:57:20.470, 2021-06-07T16:58:21.048, 2021-06-07T16:59:21.723). Not enough to significantly change the view of the moon.