voy1_v_c_o_TPMBK (Voyager 1-33, P-21152C, poss. AC79-7024 eq)
“This view of Jupiter was obtained by Voyager 1 on Feb. 22, 1979, from a distance of 7.6 million miles (12.2 million kilometers). It shows the Great Red Spot just emerging from the brief, five-hour Jovian night. One of three bright, oval clouds which were observed to form approximately 40 years ago can be seen immediately below the Red Spot. Most of the other features appearing in this view are too small to be seen clearly from Earth. The color picture was assembled from three black-and-white photos in the Image Processing Lab at Jet Propulsion Laboratory. JPL manages and controls the Voyager project for NASA’s Office of Space Science.”
The only place I came across it - correctly oriented - with respect to the plane of the ecliptic:
digital.archives.caltech.edu/islandora/object/image%3A8625
Credit: ‘Caltech Archives’ website
Last & least:
They have it, under an Ames Research Center (ARC) photo ID - upside down. But hey, it’s from NASA’s Keystone Cop-emulating historical/archival photo…whatever it is. Although it looks like a scan of an 8” x 10” positive transparency left in the sun too long, it’s better than nothing, which is often the case. So ‘yay’:
voy1_v_c_o_TPMBK (Voyager 1-33, P-21152C, poss. AC79-7024 eq)
“This view of Jupiter was obtained by Voyager 1 on Feb. 22, 1979, from a distance of 7.6 million miles (12.2 million kilometers). It shows the Great Red Spot just emerging from the brief, five-hour Jovian night. One of three bright, oval clouds which were observed to form approximately 40 years ago can be seen immediately below the Red Spot. Most of the other features appearing in this view are too small to be seen clearly from Earth. The color picture was assembled from three black-and-white photos in the Image Processing Lab at Jet Propulsion Laboratory. JPL manages and controls the Voyager project for NASA’s Office of Space Science.”
The only place I came across it - correctly oriented - with respect to the plane of the ecliptic:
digital.archives.caltech.edu/islandora/object/image%3A8625
Credit: ‘Caltech Archives’ website
Last & least:
They have it, under an Ames Research Center (ARC) photo ID - upside down. But hey, it’s from NASA’s Keystone Cop-emulating historical/archival photo…whatever it is. Although it looks like a scan of an 8” x 10” positive transparency left in the sun too long, it’s better than nothing, which is often the case. So ‘yay’: