Miranda - High Resolution Mosaic
Image Not Available

Miranda - High Resolution Mosaic

Image Not Available
Photograph

Miranda - High Resolution Mosaic

January 24, 1986
Gelatin silver print
Image: 23.2 x 19.4 cm
Overall: 25.5 x 20.2 cm
Gift of NASA and NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory
Inscriptions verso (applied label, typed): PUBLIC INFORMATION OFFICE/ JET PROPULSION LABORATORY/ CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY/ NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND SPACE ADMINISTRATION/ PASADENA, CALIFORNIA, 91109. TELEPHONE: (818) 354-5011/ PHOTO CAPTION (TOP) P-29541 B/W/ U-2-47/ 1/28/86/ This computer-assembled mosaic of Miranda includes many of /the high-resolution frames obtained by Voyager 2 during its/ close flyby of the Uranian moon. Miranda, roughly 500/ kilometers (300 miles) in diameter, exhibits varied geologic/ provinces, seen in this mosaic of clear-filter, narrow-angle/ images from Jan. 24, 1986. The images were obtained from/ distances of 30,160 to 40,310 km (18,730 to 25,030 mi);/ resolution ranges from 560 to 740 meters (1,840 to 2,430/ feet). These are among the highest-resolution pictures that/ Voyager has obtained of any of the new "worlds" it has/ encountered during its mission. On Miranda, ridges and/ valleys of one province are cut off against the boundary of/ the next province. Probable compressional (pushed-together)/ folded ridges are seen in curvilinear patterns, as are many/ extensional (pulled-apart) faults. Some of these show very/ large scarps, or cliffs, ranging from 0.5 to 5 km (0.3 to 3/ mi) in height - that is, higher that the walls of the Grand/ Canyon on Earth. The missing piece of Miranda's surface will/ be included in a later mosaic once more complicated computer/ processing can be completed. The Voyager project is/ managed for NASA by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory./ #####
Related Media

Review and updating of the museum's collection data is ongoing.
Inclusion of an object in this database does not guarantee its availability for loan.
For permission to use images from the online collections, please contact Image Rights and Reproductions.