Search results
Refine this list of images by: Target: Mission: Instrument: Click on an image for detailed information. Click on a column heading to sort in ascending or descending order.
- Target
Dione as seen by Voyager 2 Full Resolution: TIFF (640.9 kB)...
- Addition Date
Refine this list of images by: Target: ... Saturn Taken from...
- Oberon
Discovery Oberon was discovered in Jan. 11, 1787 by William...
- Phoebe
Discovery Phoebe was discovered August 1898 by American...
- Target
This image, taken by NASA's Voyager 2 early in the morning of Aug. 23, 1989, is a false color image of Triton, Neptune's largest satellite; mottling in the bright southern hemisphere is present.
Dione as seen by Voyager 2 Full Resolution: TIFF (640.9 kB) JPEG (82.34 kB) 1998-10-30: Earth: Voyager: VG Imaging Science Subsystem: 2012x2994x3: PIA01480: ... Voyager 2 Color Image of Enceladus, Almost Full Disk Full Resolution: TIFF (1.99 MB) JPEG (95.52 kB) 1998-12-05: Enceladus: Voyager: VG ISS - Narrow Angle ...
Voyager 2 Launch Full Resolution: TIFF (12.06 MB) JPEG (321.8 kB) 2017-07-05: Voyager: 1760x2227x1: PIA21743: Voyager 2 Encapsulation Full Resolution ... Amateurs to take a Crack at Juno Images Full Resolution: TIFF (28.31 MB) JPEG (471.1 kB) 2011-04-29: Voyager: 981x552x3: PIA14113: Voyager's Special Cargo ...
The Voyager 1 and 2 spacecraft explored Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune before starting their journey toward interstellar space. Here you'll find some of those iconic images, including "The Pale Blue Dot" - famously described by Carl Sagan - and what are still the only up-close images of Uranus and Neptune.
Voyager 2 is a space probe launched by NASA on August 20, 1977, as a part of the Voyager program. It was launched on a trajectory towards the gas giants Jupiter and Saturn and enabled further encounters with the ice giants Uranus and Neptune.
This photograph was taken on June 29, 1979, when Voyager 2 was nearly 6 million miles (9 million kilometers) from Jupiter. The smallest features visible are more than 106 miles (170 kilometers) across.