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B5C1JX Jupiter and its four Galilean moons as seen through a small telescope.
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2PR5811 Jupiter and its four planet-size moons, called the Galilean satellites, were photographed in early March 1979 by Voyager 1 and assembled into this collage. They are not to scale but are in their relative positions. Startling new discoveries on the Galilean moons and the planet Jupiter made by Voyager l factored into a new mission design for Voyager 2. Reddish Io (upper left) is nearest Jupiter; then Europa (center); Ganymede and Callisto (lower right). Nine other much smaller satellites circle Jupiter, one inside Io's orbit and the other millions of miles from the planet. Not visible is Jupite
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2M689RT Jupiter and its moons. Vector educational poster, scientific infographic, presentation template. Io, Europa, Ganymede and Callisto, four major the Gal
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3BWEK49 December 21, 2020, Laguna Beach, California, USA: Jupiter and Saturn appear within six arc-minutes of each other in the night sky approximately every 375 years. The proximity is only apparent as Saturn is millions of miles beyond Jupiter. The last time the Great Conjunction occurred was in 1623, but it was only visible briefly from the equatorial regions of Earth. The next time it will occur is on March 15, 2080..Jupiter is the largest, brightest object, with Saturn to its right. Aligned with Jupiter are its four largest (''Galilean'') moons. From top to bottom they are Callisto, Io, Ganymed
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CEC876 Jupiter and its four Galilean satellites (L-R: Ganymede, Europa, Io and Callisto), as seen through binoculars magnifying 8 times
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2M682HJ Jupiter and its moons. Vector educational poster, scientific infographic, presentation template. Io, Europa, Ganymede and Callisto, four major the Gal
RF
3BWEK34 December 21, 2020, Laguna Beach, California, USA: Jupiter and Saturn appear within six arc-minutes of each other in the night sky approximately every 375 years. The proximity is only apparent as Saturn is millions of miles beyond Jupiter. The last time the Great Conjunction occurred was in 1623, but it was only visible briefly from the equatorial regions of Earth. The next time it will occur is on March 15, 2080. Jupiter is the largest, brightest object, with Saturn to its right. Aligned with Jupiter are its four largest (''Galilean'') moons. From top to bottom they are Callisto, Io, Ganymed
DC
3AYBTD1 Feb 28, 2009 - On Jan. 7, 1610, Galileo Galilei's improvements to the telescope enabled humanity to see Jupiter's four largest moons for the first time. Io, Europa, Ganymede and Callisto, the so-called Galilean satellites, were seen by the Long Range Reconnaissance Imager on the New Horizons spacecraft during its flyby of Jupiter in late February 2007. The images have been scaled to represent the true relative sizes of the four moons and are arranged in their order from Jupiter. Io is notable for its active volcanism, which New Horizons studied extensively. On the other hand, Europa's smooth,
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Total de Resultados: 8

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