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Cross-cutting Relationships of Surface Features on Europa

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Summary

Cross-cutting Relationships of Surface Features on Europa

NASA/JPL

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europa galileo jpl jet propulsion laboratory relationships surface surface features europa nasa nasa
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Date

26/03/1998
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Source

NASA
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Link

https://images.nasa.gov/
copyright

Copyright info

Public Domain Dedication (CC0)

label_outline Explore Europa Nasa, Surface Features, Galileo

A man works to install a submarine emergency communication transmitter (SEC) buoy Mark 9 Mod O outside the pressure hull and inside the other hull of a simulated submarine hull section during testing at the Naval Ordnance Laboratory. When put into fleet use the SECT will be released and act as a surface marker if and when the ship is sunk

A couple of birds that are in the water. Swan take off competition.

P-21747 C Range: 2,200,000 miles This image shows a region of the Jovian atmosphere from approximately 25° N to the equatorial region. The north temperate jet, at approximately 23° N, where the wind speed is about 150 meters per second, is seen as a dark brown line from the left-hand edge to the right-hand corner of the picture. The wispy clouds of the north equatorial belt appear as shades of brown. The lower right-hand corner of the image shows the brighter (white) clouds of the equatorial region. A small blue area is apparent near the lower edge, which corresponds to a region free of the upper clouds, where it is possible to penetrate to cloud layers approximately 60 kilometers below the visible surface. ARC-1979-AC79-7081

STS082-731-050 - STS-082 - HST, survey views of the telescope surface and structures

Skylab. NASA Skylab space station - Public domain map

Jupiter Long-lived White Ovals in False Color Time Set 4

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. – Spotlights illuminate the United Launch Alliance Delta II Heavy rocket that will launch NASA’s twin Gravity Recovery and Interior Laboratory (GRAIL) mission from Space Launch Complex 17B on Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida. Liftoff is scheduled for 9:08:52 a.m. EDT Sept. 10. GRAIL will fly twin spacecraft in tandem around the moon to precisely measure and map variations in the moon's gravitational field. The mission will provide the most accurate global gravity field to date for any planet, including Earth. This detailed information will reveal differences in the density of the moon's crust and mantle and will help answer fundamental questions about the moon's internal structure, thermal evolution, and history of collisions with asteroids. The aim is to map the moon's gravity field so completely that future moon vehicles can safely navigate anywhere on the moon’s surface. For more information, visit http://www.nasa.gov/grail. Photo credit: NASA/Sandra Joseph and Don Kight KSC-2011-6907

C-130 Hercules aircrew Engineer STAFF Sergeant Jeff Morgan (left) and Navigator Catain Keith Allbritten, 61st Airlift Squadron, discuss the status of the lanes chafe and flares with an electronic warfare secialist rior to flying into the former Yugoslavia region. The chafe and flares are discharged when the early warning system or a loadmaster erceives a ossible threat to the lane from anti aircraft armament or surface to air missiles. The Green Hornets are deloyed to Ramstein Air Base, Germany, for a 100 day Temorary Duty (TDY) tour assisting Oeration JOINT GUARD (reviously Oeration JOINT ENDEAVOR). Flying C-130s every day to the Former Yugoslav region (rimarily Tuzla) they...

Martian Surface & Pathfinder Airbags, Mars Pathfinder Images

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Astronaut David Scott watching hammer and feather fall to lunar surface

ETH-BIB-Blick aus dem Flugzeugfenster auf Wolken-Weitere-LBS MH02-27-0045

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europa galileo jpl jet propulsion laboratory relationships surface surface features europa nasa nasa