Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byNorman Mitchell Modified over 7 years ago
2
"All truths are easy to understand once they are discovered; the point is to discover them."
Galileo Galilei ( )
3
October 18, 1989
5
Venus-Earth-Earth Gravity Assist a. k. a. “VEEGA” was a first
Venus-Earth-Earth Gravity Assist a.k.a. “VEEGA” was a first. The mission planning guys figured out how to do that with Galileo.
7
"My car license plate says `VEEGA,'
…Every morning, I go out and I see the word.” Roger Diehl Trajectory specialist
8
Venus flyby February 10, 1990
9
Goodbye Home December 11, 1990, from about 1.3 million miles away.
11
Galileo discovered Dactyl orbiting the asteroid Ida.
13
"I popped in these two wonderful 8x10’s and became the first human being to see a stereo image of an asteroid at high resolution! That entire weekend, anyone who came close to my door was dragged over: ’Look at this!’ You know, the mailman, the babysitter. That was really a thrill." Paul Geissler Planetary geologist
14
Galileo was the first spacecraft to observe an impact
into a planetary body, when comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 crashed into Jupiter.
15
July 22, 1994
16
First probe into a gas giant’s atmosphere
18
“With only a week to go, I'm really excited
“With only a week to go, I'm really excited. It's hard to sleep at night… I have to just give up … and write out what I'm thinking… Even doing that I can't always get back to sleep, but sometimes it works.” Jim Erickson November 27, 1995 Probe Release
20
“The signal came about 6 minutes later than I had been expecting, so I was getting very fearful that something had gone wrong. When the confirmation finally came through, I was nearly in tears from the joy of knowing that we had done it!” Leslie Tamppari December 11, 1995 Probe Release
21
Galileo discovered a possible
ocean on Callisto.
22
Jupiter's moon Callisto
25
"We will never want to do on-board management of the tape recorder..."
Famous last words: "We will never want to do on-board management of the tape recorder..."
26
Galileo discovered that Jupiter has thunderstorms 1,000 times larger than those on Earth.
27
Water Cloud Thunderstorm Northwest of Great Red Spot
28
Galileo observes thunderheads and lightning in Jupiter's atmosphere.
29
Jupiter Lightning
30
Galileo’s Near-Infrared Mapping Spectrometer (NIMS) discovers
fresh ammonia clouds on Jupiter.
31
Jupiter's multi level clouds
September 5, 1996
32
NIMS looks at the Great Red Spot
33
volcanic activity on Io.
Galileo observes volcanic activity on Io.
34
Eruption on Io June 28, 1996
35
Io Oct. 16, 2001
36
Voyager-1979 Galileo
37
"There was always something to fix.
It kept me busy.'' Greg Levanas Engineer
38
Volcanic plumes on Io
39
Color Mosaic and Active Volcanic Plumes on Io
November 17, 1997
41
Io's Culann-Tohil Region
42
“New Galileo Images Hint At Wet And Wild History For Europa”
NASA Press Release April 9, 1997
47
“Solar System's Largest Moon Likely has a Hidden Ocean”
NASA Press Release Ganymede December 16, 2000
48
Ganymede - Ancient Impact Craters in Galileo Regio
49
Ganymede
52
Simultaneous observation of the Jupiter system by two spacecraft
(Cassini and Galileo)
53
Galileo and Cassini spacecraft in late December 2000 and early January 2001.
55
Jupiter's rings found to be composed of debris from Jupiter's small inner satellites
56
Jupiter's Inner Satellites and Rings
57
Jupiter's Inner Satellites and Ring Components
58
Jupiter's Ring System
59
Jupiter's Main Ring/Ring Halo
60
"It's not going to go on forever. Everything has to end.
It's going to be a sad day though.” Andy Ingersoll Scientist
61
“If we found life someplace else
it would give us a vastly new perspective on existence. We would probably realize that we weren't quite so important as we thought we were. I mean, it might take us down a peg, which … could be useful.” Randy Tufts Former geologist at the University of Arizona ( )
62
We will be back
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.