Keywords: Ganymede USGS map.jpg LargeImage en Prepared on behalf of the Planetary Geology and Geophysics Program Solar System Exploration Division Office of Space Science National Aeronautics and Space Administration NOTES ON BASE This sheet is one in a series of maps of the Galilean satellites of Jupiter at a nominal scale of 1 15 000 000 This series is based on data from the Galileo Orbiter Solid-State Imaging SSI camera and the Voyager 1 and 2 spacecraft PROJECTION Mercator and Polar Stereographic projections used for this map of Ganymede are based on a sphere having a radius of 2632 345 km The scale is 1 8 388 000 at ±56° latitude for both projections Longitude increases to the west in accordance with the International Astronomical Union 1971 Davies and others 1996 Latitude is plan- etographic CONTROL The geometric control network was computed at the RAND Corporation Davies and others 1998; Davies and Katayama 1981 This map of Ganymede utilized RAND �s most recent solution as of November 1999 This process involved selecting control points on the individual images making pixel measurements of their locations using reseau locations to correct for geometric distortions and converting the measurements to millimeters in the focal plane These data are combined with the camera focal lengths and navigation solutions as input to photogrammetric triangulation software that solves for the best-fit sphere the coordinates of the control points the three orien- tation angles of the camera at each exposure right ascension declination and twist and an angle W0 which defines the orientation of Ganymede in space W0 �in this solution 44 064° �is the angle along the equator to the east between the 0° meridian and the equator �s intersection with the celestial equator at the standard epoch J2000 0 This solution places the crater Anat at its defined longitude of 128° Davies and oth- ers 1996 MAPPING TECHNIQUE This global map base uses the best image quality and moderate resolution coverage supplied by Galileo SSI and Voyager 1 and 2 Batson 1987; Becker and others 1998; Becker and others 1999; Becker and others 2001 The monochrome and color data were both processed using Integrated Software for Imagers and Spectrometers ISIS Eliason 1997; Gaddis and others 1997; Torson and Becker 1997 The individual images were radiometrically calibrated and photometrically normalized using a Lunar- Lambert function with empirically derived values McEwen 1991; Kirk and others 2000 A linear correction based on the statistics of all overlapping areas was then applied to minimize image brightness variations The image data were selected on the basis of overall image quality reasonable original input resolution from 20 km/pixel for gap fill to as much as 180 m/pixel and availability of moderate emission/inci- dence angles for topography and albedo The black and white monochrome base mosaic was constructed separately from the three-band color mosaic Although consis- tency was achieved where possible different filters were included for the mono- chrome global image coverage as necessary clear for Voyager 1 and 2; clear near-IR 757 nm and green 559 nm for Galileo SSI Individual images were projected to a Sinusoidal Equal-Area projection at an image resolution of 1 0 km/pixel The global color map was processed in Sinusoidal projection with an image resolution of 6 0 km/pixel The color utilized the SSI filters 1-micron 991 nm wavelength for red SSI 559 nm for green and SSI 413 nm for violet Where SSI color coverage was lacking in the longitude range of 210° �250° Voyager 2 wide-angle images were included to complete the global coverage The chosen filters for the Voyager 2 data were ~530 nm for green and ~480 �500 nm for blue The red band was synthesized in this area based on statistics calculated from the surrounding SSI 1-micron 991 nm data and SSI and Voyager data in the green and blue bands The final global color map was then scaled up to 1 0 km/pixel and merged with the monochrome base mosaic The north pole and south pole regions that lack digital color coverage have been completed with the monochrome map coverage The final constructed Sinusoidal projection mosaic was then reprojected to the Mercator and Polar Stereographic projections included on this sheet The color of the final mosaic was enhanced using commercial software NOMENCLATURE Names on this sheet are approved by the International Astronomical Union IAU 1980 1986 1999 and 2001 Names have been applied for features clearly visible at the scale of this map; for a complete list of nomenclature for Ganymede please see http //planetarynames wr usgs gov http //geopubs wr usgs gov/i-map/i2762/ USGS 2002-01-17 Maps of Ganymede PD-USGov |