Here are my versions of image PJ10_028. I recently made minor improvements to my processing. The biggest difference is that now I no longer 'lose' the fuzzy and bluish horizon at the limb in the hi-res images as as result of the processing (the limb isn't sharply defined in these images as in my earlier images). First three approximately true color/contrast versions:
Click to view attachmentClick to view attachmentClick to view attachmentNotice the bluish horizon at the limb, especially in the central image. This is Jupiter's blue sky.
And versions with enhanced colors, contrast and sharpness:
Click to view attachmentClick to view attachmentClick to view attachmentJuno was only 4420 km above Jupiter's clouds. This is especially obvious in the central image which has a field of view of 70 degrees.
The image below shows Jupiter's blue sky at the limb; this is an approximately true color/contrast image. This image has a field of view of 20 degrees. This corresponds to an enlargement by a factor of ~3 compared to the original framelets.
Click to view attachmentAnd finally a subset of the relevant metadata:
IMAGE_TIME = 2017-12-16T17:59:33.468
MISSION_PHASE_NAME = PERIJOVE 10
PRODUCT_ID = JNCE_2017350_10C00028_V01
SPACECRAFT_ALTITUDE = 4420.2
SPACECRAFT_NAME = JUNO
SUB_SPACECRAFT_LATITUDE = 5.7721
SUB_SPACECRAFT_LONGITUDE = 297.5258
TITLE = North Equatorial Belt, southern edge
Resolution at nadir: ~3.0 km/pixel