- Captain's Logs
- Feb 23, '22
- Sep 15, '17
- Sep 15, '15
- Jan 14, '15
- Dec 24, '14
- Jul 28, '14
- Jun 30, '14
- Nov 12, '13
- Jun 18, '13
- Dec 18, '12
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- Nov 1, '10
- Sep 21, '09
- May 7, '09
- Apr 2, '09
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- Nov 1, '08
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- Dec 24, '07
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- Feb 27, '04
- Dec 5, '03
- Nov 13, '03
- Nov 1, '02
- Mar 13, '02
- May 31, '01
- Oct 9, '00
- Feb 11, '00
- Sep 1, '99

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Io, the South Polar Region
This Voyager 1 image mosaic shows Io's south polar region. The South Pole is near the terminator (line between daylight and night) at right center. Haemus Mons, a 10-km high (32,000 foot) mountain is at bottom. Elsewhere, much flatter volcanic plains, eroded volcanic plateaus, and crater-like volcanic calderas dominate the scene. The partly black-filled caldera at far left is Creidne Patera.
The composition of the prevalent volcanic plains of Io could consist dominantly of sulfur with a thin discontinuous coating of sulfur dioxide frost or of silicates (such as basalt) coated with sulfurous condensates. The black material in Creidne Patera is where sulfur or silicates are probably still molten, whereas the brown material in the caldera is probably where the sulfur has solidified.
The Voyager Project is managed for NASA by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.
Acquired: March 1979 |
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 PIA 00327
Full Size 2175x2810:
JPEG 314 KB
PNG 4.1 MB
TIFF 8.0 MB
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