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Antdoghalo
Hello I have recently been doing a project where I find high resolution maps of a planet and put it into Google Earth. Then along with kml files found here http://planetarynames.wr.usgs.gov/GIS_Downloads I make a big overlay with it and upload it into Google Earth Community. Along the way I give credit to the makers of the images and map overlays.

The problem is I have ran into issues with Jupiter's moon Io. I cannot find high resolution maps without labels of Io that are centered on 0E (Pele on the right). While searching for maps I remembered that some on UMSF are planetary map enthusiasts and I was wondering if you please could help me find one or make one. I have tried the maps from astropedia but the ones for Io are too big in order for Google Earth to cooperate. The reason I want them to be centered on 0E with Pele on the right is because the nomenclature kml from USGS has the places located to fit into this configuration and it would take a really long time to do it otherwise.
I am looking for a map in the vicinity of between 8192 x 4096 and 4000 x 2000
Along with that a way to properly credit the author.

I don't know if this is exactly place in the forum to put this post, it's been a while 5 year since I was last here when I was a lot younger.
Phil Stooke
So, is this map:


http://laps.noaa.gov/albers/sos/jupiter/io/io_rgb_cyl.jpg


OK except that you want a different central meridian?

(also, do you use Photoshop?)

Phil
Antdoghalo
Yes please, I want a version that is rotated 180 degrees so that Pele and Loki are to the right of the meridian.
I don't use photoshop and I have nonexistant knowledge of how to use illustrator.
Phil Stooke
Ok, on the assumptions that Steve won't object since his map is public anyway, and also that others might find it useful as well, here is Steve Albers' map of Io shifted 180 degrees.

Phil

Click to view attachment
Antdoghalo
Thank you so much! It goes perfectly with the kml file on the USGS site!
By the way is there a way to properly credit Albers? I plan to share the overlay on Google Earth Community (a site for Google Earth hobbyists).
scalbers
Greetings - glad you all have come across my Io map. I have a description of how this was constructed on my web site here:

http://laps.noaa.gov/albers/sos/sos.html#IO

Perhaps you can credit it to me (Steve Albers) and include this link. If you want to add some of that information, it's fine. It's funny that I never had figured out the identity of "Laika".
JohnVV
i have a 8192x4096 map
----- 90n
-180 to 0 to +180
----- 90S

that is in my Celestia VT add on
a copy of it is also on my G-drive
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B6ZYAd08tZ...iew?usp=sharing
a 1/4 2048x1024 preview


this map is heavily cleaned up to remove seams and inpainted a few bad areas in the poles
Antdoghalo
When I was finding maps for Venus on Astropedia I had a 50% success rate of the 6 jpeg maps they had of that size to work with GE. 3 worked and 3 didn't. I am not sure if png will work, I don't think it will.
JohnVV
you can always use the terminal version of Gmic or imagemagick to convert it into any of the hundreds of formats they support

do you need a isis cub with latitude and longitude information ?
or
a GEO-Tiff with latitude and longitude information in a xml file ?
Antdoghalo
Thanks however I was looking for a file online, then I would link it as an overlay to GE. If it was linked to a file on my computer it wouldn't show when I upload it Google Earth Community. I know very little of advanced image processing programs.
There is also a geological map of Io that I would like to have rotated as well as the white area on the outside removed (or it would not show properly).
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/comm...99s_Moon_Io.jpg
scalbers
Greetings - some of these aspects of using ImageMagick (that I like to use) and related tools might be discussed in this sub-forum:

http://www.unmannedspaceflight.com/index.php?showforum=57

We might also talk there about simple ways to post image files online?
Antdoghalo
Thanks! I forgot there was a section dedicated to those and image conversion programs.
I will be able to post it on Photobucket.
scalbers
For completeness I can mention this USGS map that was made after mine was. It is 11400 pixels wide:

http://astrogeology.usgs.gov/search/detail...lrMerge_1km/cub

It's been a while since I've worked with this large version, but it is a good map.
Antdoghalo
That was the one I tried to use but I encountered problems with in Google Earth. It was able to load some of it but 3/4s of the image won't load because of GE's limitations at around 8192 pixels.
Antdoghalo
I have completed the Jovian system overlay in Google Earth I was working on, you can find images of it here.
Jupiter Megaoverlay
Unfortunately you currently need an account there to download it.
Again thanks for all the help, I couldn't have done it without you all.
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