This image is part of the NASA Planetary Photo Journal Collection and found at nasaimages.org. Here is the photo's accompanying text:
The solar system's largest moon, Ganymede, is captured here alongside
the planet Jupiter in a color picture taken by NASA's Cassini spacecraft
on Dec. 3, 2000.
Ganymede is larger than the planets Mercury
and Pluto and Saturn's largest moon, Titan. Both Ganymede and Titan have
greater surface area than the entire Eurasian continent on our planet.
Cassini was 26.5 million kilometers (16.5 million miles) from Ganymede
when this image was taken. The smallest visible features are about 160
kilometers (about 100 miles) across.
The bright area near the
south (bottom) of Ganymede is Osiris, a large, relatively new crater
surrounded by bright icy material ejected by the impact, which created
it. Elsewhere, Ganymede displays dark terrains that NASA's Voyager and
Galileo spacecraft have shown to be old and heavily cratered. The
brighter terrains are younger and laced by grooves. Various kinds of
grooved terrains have been seen on many icy moons in the solar system.
These are believed to be the surface expressions of warm, pristine,
water-rich materials that moved to the surface and froze.
Ganymede has proven to be a fascinating world, the only moon known to
have a magnetosphere, or magnetic environment, produced by a convecting
metal core. The interaction of Ganymede's and Jupiter's magnetospheres
may produce dazzling variations in the auroral glows in Ganymede's
tenuous atmosphere of oxygen.
Cassini is a cooperative project
of NASA, the European Space Agency and the Italian Space Agency. The
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, a division of the California Institute of
Technology in Pasadena, manages the Cassini mission for NASA's Office of
Space Science, Washington, D.C.
Here is an earlier shot of Ganymede from NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory's Photojournal page:
In this global view of Ganymede's trailing side, the colors are
enhanced to emphasize color differences. The enhancement reveals frosty
polar caps in addition to the two predominant terrains on Ganymede,
bright, grooved terrain and older, dark furrowed areas. Many craters
with diameters up to several dozen kilometers are visible. The violet
hues at the poles may be the result of small particles of frost which
would scatter more light at shorter wavelengths (the violet end of the
spectrum). Ganymede's magnetic field, which was detected by the
magnetometer on NASA's Galileo spacecraft in 1996, may be partly
responsible for the appearance of the polar terrain. Compared to Earth's
polar caps, Ganymede's polar terrain is relatively vast. The frost on
Ganymede reaches latitudes as low as 40 degrees on average and 25
degrees at some locations. For comparison with Earth, Miami, Florida
lies at 26 degrees north latitude, and Berlin, Germany is located at 52
degrees north.
North is to the top of the picture. The composite,
which combines images taken with green, violet, and 1 micrometer
filters, is centered at 306 degrees west longitude. The resolution is 9
kilometers (6 miles) per picture element. The images were taken on 29
March 1998 at a range of 918000 kilometers (570,000 miles) by the Solid
State Imaging (SSI) system on NASA's Galileo spacecraft.
The Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, CA manages the Galileo mission for NASA's Office of Space Science, Washington, DC.