Early ENA Results from the IMAGE Mission Pollock, C.J., K. Asamura, M.M. Balkey, J.L. Burch, M.-C. Fok, H.O. Funsten, M. Grande, M. Gruntman, J.-M. Jahn, M. Lampton, D.J. McComas, T. Mukai, S. Ritzau, M.L. Schattenburg, E. Scime, R. Skoug, P. Valek, and M. Wuest, The IMAGE mission was conceived to answer outstanding scientific questions regarding the response of the Earth's magnetosphere to global solar wind forcing. Three of the instruments on IMAGE are dedicated to energetic neutral atom (ENA) imaging, two are dedicated to UV imaging, and one is a radio plasma sounder. Image was to have been launched into a 7 Re X 1000 km orbit on February 15. A real time data stream, useful for space weather "now casting" is to be transmitted from the spacecraft and received by ground stations, as arranged by the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Space Environment Laboratory. We will present initial results from IMAGE, with emphasis on observations of the Medium Energy Neutral Atom (MENA) imager. We will describe the instrument, show examples of calibration results, and show examples of data obtained early in the orbital mission. We will discuss the significance of the ENA imaging technique and specific applications of the technique to topics germane to space weather. _______________ Presented at the NATO Advanced Study Institute on Space Storms and Space Weather Hazards, Hersonissos (Crete), Greece, June 19-29, 2000.