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This bar indicates that you are within the PDS enterprise which includes 6 science discipline nodes and 2 support nodes which are overseen by the Project Management Office at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC). Each node is led by an expert in the subject discipline, supported by an advisory group of other practitioners of that discipline, and subject to selection and approval under a regular NASA Research Announcement.
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My Favorite Images from the Planetary Photojoural
I have 4 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 PIA14886 Kepler-20 Kepler
2011-12-20 4200x2700x3
This chart compares the first Earth-size planets found around a sun-like star to planets in our own solar system, Earth and Venus. NASA's Kepler mission discovered the newfound planets, called Kepler-20e and Kepler-20f.
Title:
Earth-class Planets Line Up
Remove Image from Favorite List PIA01590 Mars Hubble Space Telescope
WFPC2
1999-08-23 800x800x3
Astronomers using NASA's Hubble Space Telescope took this view of Mars taking advantage of the space-based observatory's close approach to Mars, centering on the region known as Tharsis, home of the largest volcanoes in the solar system.
Title:
A Closer Hubble Encounter With Mars - Tharsis
Remove Image from Favorite List PIA04091 Mars 2001 Mars Odyssey
THEMIS
2003-01-22 1203x3007x1
The impact crater in this NASA Mars Odyssey image is a model illustration of the effects of erosion on Mars. The degraded crater rim and several landslides observed in crater walls are evidence of the mass wasting of materials.
Title:
Erosion Effects
Remove Image from Favorite List PIA08747 Mars Mars Global Surveyor (MGS)
Mars Orbiter Camera (MOC)
2006-09-11 672x1246x1
This image from NASA's Mars Global Surveyor shows dark lava flows that have embayed -- flowed up against and into -- higher, more rugged terrain in the Cyclopia/Aethiopis region of Mars (southwest of Cerberus).
Title:
Embaying Flow