Thursday, February 13, 2014

Global map of Ganymede, Jupiter's biggest moon

Making the map of Ganymede was a long and complex task. 

Some of the scientists behind the map were graduate students and postdocs at Brown University when the Galileo data began to arrive in the 1990s. 

Image courtesy U.S. Geological Survey.

Scientists, including Brown University geologists and students, have completed the first global geological map of Ganymede, Jupiter's largest moon and the largest in the solar system.

With its varied terrain and possible underground ocean, Ganymede is considered a prime target in the search for habitable environments in the solar system, and the researchers hope this new map will aid in future exploration.

Geoffrey Collins
The work, led by Geoffrey Collins, a Ph.D. graduate of Brown now a professor at Wheaton College in Massachusetts, took years to complete.

"It is very rewarding to see the results of all of our efforts here at Brown come together into this integrated global compilation that will now be used to plan the next phase of scientific exploration of the Galilean satellites," said Jim Head, the Scherck Distinguished Professor of Geological Sciences at Brown and one of the map's co-authors.


The researchers combined images from the Voyager and Galileo spacecraft to put the map together. Voyager was the first mission to fly through the Jupiter satellite system and passed by the icy surface of Ganymede in 1979.

Those first images revealed a complex surface, segmented and fractured into dark and light terrain.

In 1995, the Galileo spacecraft was placed in orbit around Jupiter and began to return high-resolution images of the surface that help to understand many of the features seen at low-resolution by Voyager.

Jim Head
Head was a co-investigator on the Galileo's Solid State Imaging (SSI) experiment.

In that role, he and his team were responsible for planning the imaging sequences for Ganymede in order to identify and investigate the scientific targets of highest priority.

The team worked for several years to obtain the data necessary to make the global map.

"This was an amazing time," Head said. "Brown graduate and undergraduate students worked shoulder-to-shoulder in the Planetary Geosciences Laboratory in Lincoln Field Building, studying the newly acquired images and choosing new sites of scientific interest."

"The discoveries were daily and the adrenaline was surging as we rushed to collect our thoughts and plans, review them with the SSI Team, and get them uploaded to the spacecraft in time for the next encounter."

"I'm so glad all that work has paid off in the form of this detailed global map," Head said.

"It is equally rewarding to see that the Brown team has now moved on to positions of leadership in the planetary exploration research community."

The new geological map of Ganymede, published yesterday by the U.S. Geological Survey

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