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Real-Life Decision Making

The Galileo spacecraft was launched to take pictures of the largest planet in our solar system, Jupiter. The Galileo also takes photographs of Jupiter's moons. The spacecraft is now approaching Europa, the moon you've been waiting to photograph. Your task is to decide what images to take of this moon. What will be most useful for later study?

You have a limited amount of time, and a limited number of images that can be taken. It isn't like you can run to the corner store and pick up more film! What you have is what you get. How are you ever going to decide what photos to take?

"You have to decide many things," says Jeff Klemaszewski. He is a research specialist in planetary geology. He was part of the Galileo mission, which ended in 2003. "You decide which target sites you will choose. You need to decide how close up you will take the images, and whether you will use a high or low resolution."

Often, planetary geologists who are photographing a planet or moon for the first time will take many photos of its common features. Following suit, you snap photos of the moon's common mottled terrain until you only have a few photos left.

Now you have a decision to make. Should you snap a few more of the common features found on the moon that you haven't imaged? Or should you take a few shots of some of the moon's uncommon features?

What do you do?

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