Io Plumes, 1979 [photograph].

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Io Plumes, 1979 [photograph].

Voyager Io artwork, 2 Oct 1979. [Description from photo index.]. One of the most significant discoveries of the Voyager mission was the detection of volcanic activity on Jupiter's moon, Io. The illustration above, and a similar image were used in the Smith and Johnson articles cited below. They showed what was believed to make up the interior of the moon, including sulphur, sulphur dioxide, and silicates. Similar illustrations were also used at press conferences and at public talks about the discoveries. In March 1979, Voyager I took many photographs of Jupiter and its moons. While looking at one of the photos, navigation team member Linda Morabito noticed a faint crescent on the edge of Io and reported it to the imaging team. It turned out to be the plume of a volcanic eruption. A total of nine active volcanos were eventually found on Io. The gravitational forces of Jupiter, Europa, and Ganymede combine to flex and heat the interior of Io. Io's atmosphere has such a low density and the moon has such a low gravity, that erupted material encounters little resistance, sometimes spraying up hundreds of kilometers before coming back down to the surface in a roughly circular pattern. Many of these volcanoes may be more like Old Faithful geyser on Earth, while others have lava flows like terrestrial volcanoes.

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Jet Propulsion Laboratory (U.S.). Photolab.

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One of the first people hired at GALCIT Project #1 in November 1941 was photographer George Emmerson (1913-1994), an emigrant from Newcastle, Great Britain. Audrey Voice and Mary J. Taylor as photographer's assistants joined Emmerson in 1943. Emmerson took almost all the early photos that became a part of this collection, a collection described in brief as the work product of the JPL Photolab. As JPL grew, so did the assignments to the Photolab to photograph all Laborato...