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Wait, is that a Candy, or the Moon? This NASA Photo Will Leave You Puzzled
“Our Galileo spacecraft took this false-colour mosaic, constructed from a series of 53 images, as the spacecraft zoomed over the northern regions of our Moon on December 7, 1992. The spacecraft was on its way to Jupiter,” says NASA.
The colour splatters all over the Moon represent different features of those areas. The bright pink areas spreading over the region represent the highlands. They surround the oval-shaped “crisium impact basin” that we spot at the bottom. Ancient lava activities are shown by blue-to-orange shades.
The dark blue stretch at the bottom is Mare Tranquillitatis, where Apollo 11 landed. It represents an area richer in titanium than the green and orange areas elsewhere. The light blue colour represents mineral-rich soil. These are associated with recent meteorite or asteroid impacts. The brightest blue light sparks are from the youngest craters.
The Galileo spacecraft orbited Jupiter from the year 1995 to 2003 and fed our scientists with many discoveries. The probe, named after Italian astronomer Galileo Galilee who discovered the four largest moons of Jupiter, indicated that the planet’s icy moon Europa could nestle an ocean under its surface. NASA’s caption mentioned Juno, Galileo’s successor mission which is currently exploring the planet “to help us understand the origins of our solar system.”
Instagram users are loving this colourful image of the Moon. The post has received over 20,00,000 likes and over 7,000 comments. Many have left red heart and heart-eye emojis.
“It’s a moon pie,” one user wrote in wonder. “I’m screaming. This is amazing,” wrote another who couldn’t hold their excitement.
A user commented to remind us of the time that has passed since the photos were taken in 1992, “I was exactly 8 months (+1day) old when this picture was taken.”
Here’s the post by NASA: