This montage of twelve images of JunoCam of Jupiter's moon Io represent some of the highest-resolution views taken of the volcanic moon since the New Horizons encounter in 2007. While JunoCam images of Io's nightside mostly reveal noise caused either by radiation from Jupiter's magnetic field or cosmic rays, the first six images do show the Prometheus plume, a volcanic canopy of sulfur dioxide-rich gas and dust that has been active since at least 1979. Prometheus is the white-blue feature near the terminator (the boundary between day and night) in the first six images. In the last 7 images, hints of Jupiter-shine can be seen across the Jupiter-facing hemisphere of Io.

The highest resolution image (second image in the middle row) was acquired from a distance of 22,243 kilometers (13,821 miles) and has a pixel scale of 15 kilomters (9.3 miles) per pixel. These twelve images were acquired over a period of 50 minutes on July 31, 2023.