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  Home > Space & Science


Juno Spacecraft: Nasa's New Mission To Jupiter


Artist's illustration of NASA's Juno spacecraft at Jupiter. The probe will enter orbit around the solar system's largest planet on July 4, 2016. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech

 


 July 6th, 2016  |  09:29 AM  |   1975 views

Space.com

 

The Juno spacecraft, which arrived at Jupiter on July 4, 2016, will study the planet in detail to give scientists a better idea of the gas giant's weather, magnetic environment and formation history.

 

Juno is only the second long-term mission at Jupiter after the Galileo spacecraft of the 1990s and 2000s. However, Juno's mission is planned to last for a much shorter period, as it is currently being targeted to impact Jupiter in February 2018.

 

Development history

 

Juno is one of three New Frontiers probes that NASA is currently operating or building. The others are New Horizons, which flew by Pluto in 2015, and OSIRIS-REx, which is expected to fly to asteroid 101955 Bennu in 2020 to collect a sample and return it to Earth.

 

New Frontiers was a program NASA created in 2003 for medium-sized missions that are capped at $1 billion in development and launch costs each. (The Curiosity rover, by contrast, cost about $2.5 billion.) A fourth mission is expected to begin selection in November 2017, with a launch for 2024.

 

The National Research Council identified a Jupiter orbiter as a scientific priority in 2003 in its decadal survey, "New Frontiers in the Solar System: An Integrated Exploration Strategy." Among the questions raised at the time were:

 

Does Jupiter have a central core, which will help narrow down how the planet was formed?

 

How much water is in its atmosphere, which helps researchers understand how big planets were created?

 

How it is possible that giant weather systems remain so stable?

 

What is the nature of the magnetic field and plasma surrounding Jupiter?

 

Juno was selected in 2005 and was originally expected to launch in June 2009, but was delayed until August 2011 due to NASA budgetary restrictions.

 

"The schedule change posed challenges for the Juno team," wrote Rick Grammier, the project manager for Juno, in a 2008 blog post. "Inflation would add cost, as would the personnel and management expenses of a longer project, even with the team size frozen at a low level during the early years."

 

"Another challenge, he added, "was figuring out how to maintain our heritage designs and retain skilled personnel, making the best use of their expertise during the suddenly extended early stages of the project."

 

The team decided to take advantage of the "unusually long Phase B" (a planning phase) to find and reduce the risks to the spacecraft's development. With three years to work with instead of the usual one, they hoped to avoid design changes late in the game, communication gaps and other matters.

 

Launch and in-flight maneuvers

 

Juno launched from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station on Aug. 5, 2011. While eight other spacecraft have flown in Jupiter's neighborhood in decades past, part of what makes Juno stand apart is its ability to generate solar power from Jupiter's neighborhood. The other spacecraft relied on nuclear power, but the reserves for plutonium generation have dwindled for NASA in recent decades.

 

"Solar power is possible on Juno due to improved solar-cell performance, energy-efficient instruments and spacecraft, a mission design that can avoid Jupiter's shadow, and a polar orbit that minimizes the total radiation," wrote NASA in 2016, when Juno broke a solar distance record for all spacecraft. (The previous record-holder was the Rosetta mission, which arrived at Comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko – beyond the orbit of Mars – in 2014.)

 

Before setting out for Jupiter for good, Juno earned a speed boost of more than 8,800 mph (3.9 kilometers per second) when it flew by Earth on Oct. 9, 2013. The spacecraft took images of our planet (it reminded principal investigator Scott Bolton of Star Trek imagery) and also listened in on amateur radio signals as part of an outreach effort with ham radio operators.

 

In February 2016, the Juno spacecraft did a maneuver to put in on course for the gas giant for a July 4, 2016, arrival. Independence Day has been an auspicious date for NASA spacecraft arrival in the past. Examples include the Mars Pathfinder and Sojourner mission arrival at the Red Planet (1997) and Deep Impact's planned collision with Comet Tempel 1 (2005).

 

Viking 1, NASA's first lander on Mars, was also supposed to touch down on July 4, 1976, but when the spacecraft got closer, pictures revealed the landing site was too rough for a landing. Viking 1 successfully landed at an alternate site on July 20, 1976, seven years to the day after the first human moon landing.

 

Long-term stay at Jupiter

 

Several spacecraft have flown by Jupiter en route to other locations in the solar system (such as Pioneer 10 and 11, Voyager 1 and 2, and New Horizons). Even during the brief flybys, they have been able to glimpse interesting information about Jupiter and its moons. For example, New Horizons caught a large outburst on the volcanic moon Io.

 

To date, however, only one mission stayed for the long term: Galileo. After being launched from space shuttle Atlantis in October 1989, Galileo arrived at Jupiter in 1995 and spent eight years studying the planet and its moons.

 

Galileo's discoveries include finding potential salt-water oceans under the crusts of Europa, Callisto and Ganymede. It also sent a descent probe into Jupiter's atmosphere. Much of the mission's value also came from spending nearly a decade in Jupiter's system, allowing scientists the rare chance to do up-close, lengthy observations of the largest planet in the solar system.

 

Juno aims to go further. It will focus solely on Jupiter and try to answer at least some of the following questions, according to NASA:

 

How much water does Jupiter have in its atmosphere? This is important to figure out if our formation theories of the solar system are correct, or if they need some work.

What is Jupiter's atmosphere like? Specifically, what are the properties at every layer such as gas composition, temperature and cloud motions? Figuring out the weather on Jupiter will help us learn more about gas giant weather generally. (It's important for planets in our solar system, as well as exoplanets.)

 

What are the magnetic and gravity fields of Jupiter? This will give scientists some hints of what the interior structure of Jupiter looks like.

 

How does the magnetic environment of Jupiter affect its atmosphere? Part of that study will come through looking at auroras.

 


 

Source:
courtesy of SPACE

by Elizabeth Howell

 

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