NASA's Juno to Make Close Flyby of Jupiter's Moon Io on December 30
NASA's Juno to Make Close Flyby of Jupiter's Moon Io on December 30
NASA's Juno spacecraft will on Saturday, Dec. 30, make the closest flyby of Jupiter's moon Io that any spacecraft has made in over 20 years. Coming within roughly 930 miles (1,500 kilometers) from the surface of the most volcanic world in our solar system, the pass is expected to allow Juno instruments to generate a firehose of data.
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NASA's Juno spacecraft will make the closest flyby of Jupiter's moon Io in over 20 years, generating a firehose of data to study the moon's volcanic activity.
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All three cameras aboard Juno will be active during the Io flyby. The Jovian Infrared Auroral Mapper (JIRAM), which takes images in infrared, will be collecting the heat signatures emitted by volcanoes and calderas covering the moon's surface. The mission's Stellar Reference Unit (a navigational star camera that has also provided valuable science) will obtain the highest-resolution image of the surface to date. And the JunoCam imager will take visible-light color images. Juno's extended mission plan includes seven new distant Io flybys after the Feb. 3 close pass.
After the close Io pass on Feb. 3, the spacecraft will fly by Io every other orbit, with each orbit growing progressively more distant: The first will be at an altitude of about 10,250 miles (16,500 kilometers) above Io, and the last will be at about 71,450 miles (115,000 kilometers).
Starting in April 2024, the spacecraft will carry out a series of occultation experiments that use Juno's Gravity Science experiment to probe Jupiter's upper atmospheric makeup, which provides key information on the planet's shape and interior structure.
Provided by NASA