토요일, 4월 20, 2024

가니메데는 NASA의 Juno 우주선의 놀라운 새로운 이미지에서 목성 전체에 거대한 그림자를 드리웁니다.

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Deungjeong Kyungsoon
Deungjeong Kyungsoon
"경순은 통찰력 있고 사악한 사상가로, 다양한 음악 장르에 깊은 지식을 가지고 있습니다. 힙스터 문화와 자연스럽게 어우러지는 그의 스타일은 독특합니다. 그는 베이컨을 좋아하며, 인터넷 세계에서도 활발한 활동을 보여줍니다. 그의 내성적인 성격은 그의 글에서도 잘 드러납니다."

그림 1. 시민 과학자 Thomas Thumopoulos는 JunoCam 도구의 원시 데이터를 사용하여 이 향상된 컬러 이미지를 만들었습니다. 초기 이미지가 촬영되었을 당시 Juno 우주선은 남위 약 55도에서 목성의 구름 꼭대기에서 약 44,000마일(71,000km) 위에 있었고 약 666,000마일(110만km)을 도는 가니메데보다 15배 더 가깝습니다. )) 목성에서 멀리 떨어져 있습니다. 크레딧: NASA/JPL-Caltech/SwRI/MSSS, Thomas Thomopoulos의 이미지 처리 © CC BY

Jupiter during the mission’s 40th close pass by the giant planet on February 25, 2022. The large, dark shadow on the left side of the image was cast by Jupiter’s moon Ganymede.

Citizen scientist Thomas Thomopoulos created this enhanced-color image using raw data from the JunoCam instrument (Figure 1). At the time the raw image was taken, the Juno spacecraft was about 44,000 miles (71,000 kilometers) above Jupiter’s cloud tops, at a latitude of about 55 degrees south, and 15 times closer than Ganymede, which orbits about 666,000 miles (1.1 million kilometers) away from Jupiter.

An observer at Jupiter’s cloud tops within the oval shadow would experience a total eclipse of the Sun. Total eclipses are more common on Jupiter than Earth for several reasons. Jupiter has four major moons (Galilean satellites) that often pass between Jupiter and the Sun: in seven days, Ganymede transits once; Europa, twice; and Io, four times. And since Jupiter’s moons orbit in a plane close to Jupiter’s orbital plane, the moon shadows are often cast upon the planet.

Ganymede’s Shadow Projected Onto Globe of Jupiter

Figure 2. Illustration of the approximate geometry of the Ganymede’s shadow projected onto a globe of Jupiter.
Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/SwRI/MSSS, Image processing by Brian Swift © CC BY

JunoCam captured this image from very close to Jupiter, making Ganymede’s shadow appear especially large. Figure 2, created by citizen scientist Brian Swift using JunoCam data, illustrates the approximate geometry of the visible area, projected onto a globe of Jupiter.

JunoCam’s raw images are available for the public to peruse and process into image products at https://missionjuno.swri.edu/junocam/processing.

Jupiter is the largest planet in the Solar System and the fifth planet from the Sun. It is a gas giant with a mass that is more than two and a half times that of all the other planets in the Solar System combined, but is only about one-thousandth the mass of the Sun. Jupiter, behind the Moon and Venus, is the third brightest natural object in the Earth’s night sky, and it has been noticed since prehistoric times. It was named after Jupiter, the Roman god and king of the gods.

Ganymede, a satellite of the planet Jupiter, is the largest and most massive of the Solar System’s moons. It is the ninth-biggest object in the Solar System (including the Sun) and the largest without a significant atmosphere. It has a diameter of 5,268 kilometers (3,273 miles), making it 26 percent larger by volume than Mercury, but it is only 45 percent as massive. 

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