My Favorite Images from the Planetary Photojoural
I have 3 images in my list


The first time you select an image to My List, a separate browser window will open. This page will list the set of images you have selected as favorites from the Photojournal. This list is kept for a short period of time, approximately 60 days. The way we associate you with your list is through a persistent cookie left on your computer. This cookie is nothing more than a unique key that allows the Photojournal to make this association. Once created, this list is only modifiable from the same computer. Information stored in the cookie on your computer is used by the Photojournal server only during your session. If you configure your Web browser not to use cookies, you will not be able to create and refer back to a personal list of favorite images. To view your current list, click on a marked entry for your list from the catalog page, or add another favorite. For more information, see JPL's Privacy Policy.
My
List
Catalog # Target Mission Instrument Addition Date Size
Remove Image from Favorite List PIA00311 Venus Magellan
Imaging Radar
1998-06-04 2100x900x3
This perspective view of Venus, generated by computer from NASA's Magellan data and color-coded with emissivity, shows the boundary between the lowland plains and characteristic Venusian highland terrain in Ovda Region.
Title:
Magellan's Perspective View of Ovda Regio, 0° S, 129° E
Remove Image from Favorite List PIA00486 Venus Magellan
Imaging Radar
1996-11-14 2510x3072x1
This radar image mosaic of Venus from NASA's Magellan spacecraft, is in the Lada region. The mosaic shows a system of east-trending radar-bright and dark lava flows encountering and breaching a north-trending ridge belt (left of center).
Title:
Venus - System of Lava Flows and Ridge Belt
Remove Image from Favorite List PIA00473 Venus Magellan
Imaging Radar
1996-11-20 480x591x1
This image from NASA's Magellan spacecraft is of Sachs Patera on Venus. Defined as a sag-caldera, Sachs is an elliptical depression 130 meters (81 feet) in depth, spanning 40 kilometers (25 miles) in width along its longest axis.
Title:
Venus - Sag Caldera 'Sachs Patera