IMAGE PROCESSING GALLERY
For those of you who have contributed – thank you! Your labors of love have illustrated articles about Juno, Jupiter and JunoCam. Your products show up in all sorts of places. I have used them to report to the scientific community. We are writing papers for scientific journals and using your contributions – always with appropriate attribution of course. Some creations are works of art and we are working out ways to showcase them as art.
If you have a favorite “artist” you can create your own gallery. Click on “Submitted by” on the left, select your favorite artist(s), and then click on “Filter”. For other tips about the gallery click on the “Gallery Organization” tab.
We have a methane filter, included for the polar science investigation, that is almost at the limits of our detector’s wavelength range. To get enough photons for an image we need to use a very long exposure. In some images this results in scattered light in the image. For science purposes we will simply crop out the portions of the image that include this artifact. Work is in progress to determine exactly what conditions cause stray light problems so that this can be minimized for future imaging.
The JunoCam images are identified by a small spacecraft icon. You will see both raw and processed versions of the images as they become available. The JunoCam movie posts have too many images to post individually, so we are making them available for download in batches as zip files.
You can filter the gallery by many different characteristics, including by Perijove Pass, Points of Interest and Mission Phase.
A special note about the Earth Flyby mission phase images: these were acquired in 2013 when Juno flew past Earth. Examples of processed images are shown; most contributions are from amateurs.
The spacecraft spin rate would cause more than a pixel's worth of image blurring for exposures longer than about 3.2 milliseconds. For the illumination conditions at Jupiter such short exposures would result in unacceptably low SNR, so the camera provides Time-Delayed-Integration (TDI). TDI vertically shifts the image one row each 3.2 milliseconds over the course of the exposure, cancelling the scene motion induced by rotation. Up to about 100 TDI steps can be used for the orbital timing case while still maintaining the needed frame rate for frame-to-frame overlap. For Earth Flyby the light levels are high enough that TDI is not needed except for the methane band and for nightside imaging.
Junocam pixels are 12 bits deep from the camera but are converted to 8 bits inside the instrument using a lossless "companding" table, a process similar to gamma correction, to reduce their size. All Junocam products on the missionjuno website are in this 8-bit form as received on Earth. Scientific users interested in radiometric analysis should use the "RDR" data products archived with the Planetary Data System, which have been converted back to a linear 12-bit scale.
Juno's Perijove-07 Jupiter Flyby Fragments, Reconstructed in 125-Fold Time-Lapse
On July 11, 2017 (UTC), NASA's Juno probe successfully performed her Perijove-07 Jupiter flyby.
The movie covers 3 hours of this flyby in 125-fold time lapse, the time from 2017-07-11T00:45:00.000 to 2017-07-11T03:45:00.000.
It is based on 13 of the JunoCam images taken during the flyby, and on spacecraft trajectory data provided via SPICE kernel files.
For each of those 13 raw images, a short flyby scene has been rendered. Blending the scenes appropriately using the ffmpeg tool resulted in the movie.
During Perijove-07, the amount of storage available for JunoCam was restricted. Priority has been imaging of the Great Red Spot. Therefore, some large gaps in latitude coverage of good quality have been left open.
Most bright blips caused by energetic particle hits have been detected and filtered out by the rendering software.
This applies in a similar way to most of the more or less constant camera artifacts, too.
The still images are approximately illumination-adusted, i.e. almost flattened, and consecutively gamma-stretched to the 4th power of radiometric values, in order to enhance contrast and color.
Residual changes of brightness are due to imperfections of image processing.
Similar to previous perijove passes, the movie starts with views of Jupiter's northeren hemisphere, then approaches Jupiter's cloud tops up to about 3,500 km, before departure from Jupiter's southern hemisphere.
Closest approach was near 9.5 Jupiter-centric degrees northern latitude.
JunoCam was built and is operated by Malin Space Science Systems in San Diego / California / USA.
Many people at NASA, JPL, SwRI, and elsewhere have been, are, and will be required to plan and operate the Juno mission.