This image revealing the north polar region of the
Jovian moon Io was taken on October 15 by NASA’s Juno. Three of the mountain
peaks visible in the upper part of image, near the day-night dividing line,
were observed here for the first time by the spacecraft’s JunoCam.
Image data: NASA/JPL-Caltech/SwRI/MSSS, Image
processing by Ted Stryk
The orbiter has performed 56 flybys of Jupiter and documented close
encounters with three of the gas giant’s four largest moons.
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.
“By combining data from this flyby
with our previous observations, the Juno science team is studying how Io’s
volcanoes vary,” said Juno’s principal investigator, Scott Bolton of the
Southwest Research Institute in San Antonio, Texas. “We are looking for how
often they erupt, how bright and hot they are, how the shape of the lava flow
changes, and how Io’s activity is connected to the flow of charged particles in
Jupiter’s magnetosphere.”
A second ultra-close flyby of Io is
scheduled for Feb. 3, 2024, in which Juno will again come within about 930
miles (1,500 kilometers) of the surface.
The spacecraft has been monitoring Io’s volcanic activity from distances ranging from about 6,830 miles (11,000 kilometers) to over 62,100 miles (100,000 kilometers), and has provided the first views of the moon’s north and south poles. The spacecraft has also performed close flybys of Jupiter’s icy moons Ganymede and Europa.
This JunoCam image of Jupiter’s moon Io captures a
plume of material ejected from the (unseen) volcano Prometheus. Indicated by
the red arrow, the plume is just visible in the darkness below the terminator
(the line dividing day and night). The image was taken by NASA’s Juno
spacecraft on October 15.
NASA/JPL-Caltech/SwRI/MSSS
“With our pair of close flybys in December and February, Juno will
investigate the source of Io’s massive volcanic activity, whether a magma ocean
exists underneath its crust, and the importance of tidal forces from Jupiter,
which are relentlessly squeezing this tortured moon,” said Bolton.
Now in the third year of its extended mission to investigate the origin of Jupiter, the solar-powered spacecraft
will also explore the ring system where some of the gas giant’s inner moons
reside.
Picture This
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.
JunoCam was included on the
spacecraft for the public’s engagement and was designed to operate for up to
eight flybys of Jupiter. The upcoming flyby of Io will be Juno’s 57th orbit
around Jupiter, where the spacecraft and cameras have endured one of the solar
system’s most punishing radiation environments.
“The cumulative effects of all that
radiation has begun to show on JunoCam over the last few orbits,” said Ed
Hirst, project manager of Juno at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern
California. “Pictures from the last flyby show a reduction in the imager’s
dynamic range and the appearance of ‘striping’ noise. Our engineering team has
been working on solutions to alleviate the radiation damage and to keep the
imager going.”
More Io,
Please
After several months of study and
assessment, the Juno team adjusted the spacecraft’s planned future trajectory
to add seven new distant Io flybys (for a total of 18) to the extended mission
plan. 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).
The gravitational pull of Io on
Juno during the Dec. 30 flyby will reduce the spacecraft’s orbit around Jupiter
from 38 days to 35 days. Juno’s orbit will drop to 33 days after the Feb. 3
flyby.
After that, Juno’s new trajectory
will result in Jupiter blocking the Sun from the spacecraft for about five
minutes at the time when the orbiter is at its closest to the planet, a period
called perijove. Although this will be the first time the solar-powered
spacecraft has encountered darkness since its flyby of Earth in October 2013,
the duration will be too short to affect its overall operation. With the
exception of the Feb. 3 perijove, the spacecraft will encounter solar eclipses
like this during every close flyby of Jupiter from now on through the remainder
of its extended mission, which ends in late 2025.
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.
More About the
Mission
JPL, a division of Caltech in
Pasadena, California, manages the Juno mission for the principal investigator,
Scott J. Bolton, of the Southwest Research Institute in San Antonio. Juno is
part of NASA’s New Frontiers Program, which is managed at NASA’s Marshall Space
Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, for the agency’s Science Mission
Directorate in Washington. Lockheed Martin Space in Denver built and operates
the spacecraft.
More information about Juno is available at: https://www.nasa.gov/juno
Source: NASA’s Juno to Get Close Look at Jupiter’s Volcanic Moon Io on Dec. 30 - NASA
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