I27
This flyby took place over the northern part of the Antijovian
hemisphere on February 22, 2000 at a distance of 199 km. Here are
some links with info on this flyby:

Take
a look at the trajectory Galileo took during the I27 flyby.
News from I27:
- Veteran
Galileo Ventures To Vast Volcanic Vistas (JPL, February 18, 2000)
- Galileo
Girds Itself for Third Swing past Io (Space.com, February 18, 2000)
- Galileo
Passes Within 200 Kilometers of Io's Volcanic Surface (JPL, February
22, 2000)
- Galileo
Completes Third Io Flyby (JPL, February 22, 2000)
- Galileo
Survives Close Encounter with Io (Space.com, February 22, 2000)
- Galileo
Swoops by Volcanic Io (NASA Space Science News, February 22, 2000)
- Galileo
Soars by Io (Discovery.com News, February 23, 2000)
- Galileo
Begins Beaming Data to Earth (JPL, February 25, 2000)
- Galileo
Exposes Jupiter's Moons (Discovery.com, April 20, 2000)
- Spacecraft
snaps closeups of a lava flow on Io (CNN, April 20, 2000)
- Volcanoes
of Deep Space (Spacedaily.com/JPL, April 20, 2000)
- Galileo
Runs Hot, Cold with New Looks at Jovian Moons (Space.com, April
20, 2000)
- Dynamic
Terrain and Volcanoes Galore on Io (JPL, May 31, 2000)
- Galileo
spots new volcanoes on Io (CNN, June 1, 2000)
- New
Images Reveal Io's Fiery Nature
(Space.com, June 1, 2000)
- Io's
Dynamic Dance with Volcanoes (Spacedaily, June 1, 2000)
- Volcanic
Moon Io Wears Sulfur-Rich "Snow" in New NASA Images (Univ. of Arizona,
October 26, 2000)
- Jupiter's
Volcanic Moon Io: Strange Shapes In A Sizzling World (JPL,
October 26, 2000)
- Jovian
Caldron: Io's Volcanoes Revealed in Sharp Detail (Space.com, October
27, 2000)
- I27
Results discussed at the 32nd DPS Meeting (October 27, 2000)
- Galileo's
Portrait of a Snowy Moon (New York Times, November 7, 2000)
- A
Snowy Io? (ABC News, November 9, 2000)
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