Image Envision Home  Stock Images  Cart  FAQs 
  Photos   Clipart   Illustrations   All Graphics  

#2597 Leda Planitia

Similer Royalty-Free Illustrations of Venus

#2607 Perspective View of Venus by JVPD
#18571 Photo of Carlotta Chabert as Venus, Standing Nude in a Garden With Doves by Francesco Hayez by JVPD
#2587 Venus, Centered at 180 Degrees East Longitude by JVPD
#18572 Photo of a Nude Woman Floating on Ocean Waves, Cherubs Above Her, The Birth of Venus by Alexandre Cabanel by JVPD
#2589 Global View of Venus by JVPD
#2591 Volcanos in Guinevere Planitia by JVPD
#18570 Photo of the Birth of Venus by William-Adolphe Bouguereau by JVPD
#2596 Ovda Regio by JVPD
#2584 Venus Centered at the North Pole by JVPD
#2600 Eistla Regio by JVPD
#2594 Crater Isabella on Venus by JVPD
More...
Illustrations of Venus


#2597 Leda Planitia by JVPD
By JVPD


Stock Illustration Description:

This false color Magellan image shows a portion of Leda Planitia (plains) in the northern hemisphere of Venus, centered at 41 degrees north latitude, 52 degrees east longitude. The area is 220 kilometers (135 miles) wide and 275 kilometers (170 miles) long. This image was produced from Magellan radar data collected in Cycle 2 of the mission. Cycle 2 was completed January 15, 1992. The area was not imaged during the first cycle because of superior conjunction when the sun was between the Earth and Venus, preventing communication with the spacecraft. This image contains examples of several of the major geologic terrains on Venus and illustrates the basic stratigraphy or sequence of geologic events. The oldest terrains appear as bright, highly-fractured or chaotic highlands rising out of the plains. This is seen in the upper left, or northwest, quadrant of the image. The chaotic highlands, sometimes called tessera, may represent older and thicker crustal material and occupy about 15 percent of the surface of Venus. The circular ring structure in the lower left of the image is probably an impact crater. This 40 kilometer (25 miles) diameter crater has been given a proposed name, Heloise, after the French physician who lived from about 1098 to 1164 A.D. The crater was formed by the impact of an asteroid sometime before the plains lavas embayed and covered the region. The plains surround and embay the fractured highland tessera. Plains are formed by fluid volcanic flows that may have once formed vast lava seas which covered all the low lying surfaces. Plains comprise more than 80 percent of the surface of Venus. The most recent activity in the region is volcanism that produced the radar bright flows best seen in the upper right quadrant of the image. Those flows are similar to the darker plains volcanics, but apparently have more rugged surfaces that more efficiently scatter the radar signal back to the spacecraft.

Photo Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech

Topics:

royalty-free, Illustration, Illustrations, Illustrated, pictures, images, graphics, astronomy, chaotic highlands, crater, craters, heloise, heloise crater, impact crater, impact craters, jpl, leda, leda plains, leda planitia, nasa, northern hemisphere of venus, tessera, venus


License type: Editorial Royalty-free


Image File Pricing
Small JPG File
732 x 916 px
20" x 25" @ 72 dpi

$50.00 USD

Medium JPG File
1465 x 1832 px
4" x 6" @ 300 dpi
$100.00 USD

Large JPG File
2930 x 3664 px
9" x 12" @ 300 dpi
$150.00 USD
 


Poster & Art Print Pricing
Details
5 x 7 in
$31.00 USD
8 x 10 in $48.00 USD
11 x 14 in   $77.00 USD
13 x 19 in   $98.00 USD

Shipping details: print prices include standard 5-7 day shipping in the U.S. only. For orders outside the U.S., please contact customer service to get a shipping quote.   1.541.245.8566


Royalty-Free (RF)       Stock Photos       Clip Art       Illustrations       Vector Graphics       3D Designs       Cartoons       Posters & Art Prints
Copyright © Image Envision   All Rights Reserved       Privacy - Contact - About - Artist Login - License Agreement - Download Your Images