Intricate lava trails on Jupiter’s volcanic moon Io, as seen from Earth (image)

Using a telescope on a mountain in Arizona, scientists have managed to capture snapshots of Jupiter’s active moon Io – and these images are so detailed they rival images of the world from space.

To capture these images, the team used a camera called SHARK-VIS, recently installed on the Large Binocular Telescope (LBT) on Mount Graham in Arizona; the new images outline features on Io’s surface just 50 miles (80 kilometers) wide – a resolution previously only possible with spacecraft studying Jupiter. “This is equivalent to taking a photo of an object the size of a dime from a distance of 100 miles,” one researcher said. rack by the University of Arizona, which operates the telescope.

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