JunoCam, the visible light imager aboard NASA’s Juno,
captured this enhanced-color view of Jupiter’s northern high latitudes from an
altitude of about 36,000 miles (58,000 kilometers) above the giant planet’s
cloud tops during the spacecraft’s 69th flyby on Jan. 28, 2025.
Image data: NASA/JPL-Caltech/SwRI/MSSS Image
processing: Jackie Branc (CC BY)
New data from the agency’s Jovian orbiter sheds light on the fierce winds
and cyclones of the gas giant’s northern reaches and volcanic action on its
fiery moon.
NASA’s Juno mission has gathered
new findings after peering below Jupiter’s cloud-covered atmosphere and the
surface of its fiery moon, Io. Not only has the data helped develop a new model
to better understand the fast-moving jet stream that encircles Jupiter’s
cyclone-festooned north pole, it’s also revealed for the first time the
subsurface temperature profile of Io, providing insights into the moon’s inner
structure and volcanic activity.
Team members presented the findings
during a news briefing in Vienna on Tuesday, April 29, at the European
Geosciences Union General Assembly.
“Everything about Jupiter is
extreme. The planet is home to gigantic polar cyclones bigger than Australia,
fierce jet streams, the most volcanic body in our solar system, the most
powerful aurora, and the harshest radiation belts,” said Scott Bolton, principal
investigator of Juno at the Southwest Research Institute in San Antonio. “As
Juno’s orbit takes us to new regions of Jupiter’s complex system, we’re getting
a closer look at the immensity of energy this gas giant wields.”
Made with data from the JIRAM instrument aboard NASA’s
Juno, this animation shows the south polar region of Jupiter’s moon Io during a
Dec. 27, 2024, flyby. The bright spots are locations with higher temperatures
caused by volcanic activity; the gray areas resulted when Io left the field of
view.
NASA/JPL/SwRI/ASI – JIRAM Team (A.M.)
Lunar Radiator
While Juno’s microwave
radiometer (MWR) was designed to peer beneath Jupiter’s cloud tops, the team has
also trained the instrument on Io, combining its data with Jovian Infrared
Auroral Mapper (JIRAM) data for deeper insights.
“The Juno science team loves to
combine very different datasets from very different instruments and see what we
can learn,” said Shannon Brown, a Juno scientist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion
Laboratory in Southern California. “When we incorporated the MWR data with
JIRAM’s infrared imagery, we were surprised by what we saw: evidence of
still-warm magma that hasn’t yet solidified below Io’s cooled crust. At every
latitude and longitude, there were cooling lava flows.”
The data suggests that about 10% of
the moon’s surface has these remnants of slowly cooling lava just below the
surface. The result may help provide insight into how the moon renews its
surface so quickly as well as how as well as how heat moves from its deep
interior to the surface.
“Io’s volcanos, lava fields, and
subterranean lava flows act like a car radiator,” said Brown, “efficiently
moving heat from the interior to the surface, cooling itself down in the vacuum
of space.”
Looking at JIRAM data alone, the team also determined that the most energetic eruption in Io’s history (first identified by the infrared imager during Juno’s Dec. 27, 2024, Io flyby) was still spewing lava and ash as recently as March 2. Juno mission scientists believe it remains active today and expect more observations on May 6, when the solar-powered spacecraft flies by the fiery moon at a distance of about 55,300 miles (89,000 kilometers).
This composite image, derived from data collected in
2017 by the JIRAM instrument aboard NASA’s Juno, shows the central cyclone at
Jupiter’s north pole and the eight cyclones that encircle it. Data from the
mission indicates these storms are enduring features.
NASA/JPL-Caltech/SwRI/ASI/INAF/JIRAM
Colder Climes
On its 53rd orbit (Feb 18, 2023),
Juno began radio occultation experiments to explore the gas giant’s atmospheric
temperature structure. With this technique, a radio signal is transmitted from
Earth to Juno and back, passing through Jupiter’s atmosphere on both legs of
the journey. As the planet’s atmospheric layers bend the radio waves,
scientists can precisely measure the effects of this refraction to derive
detailed information about the temperature and density of the atmosphere.
So far, Juno has completed 26 radio
occultation soundings. Among the most compelling discoveries: the first-ever
temperature measurement of Jupiter’s north polar stratospheric cap reveals the
region is about 11 degrees Celsius cooler than its surroundings and is
encircled by winds exceeding 100 mph (161 kph).
Polar Cyclones
The team’s recent findings also
focus on the cyclones that haunt Jupiter’s north. Years of data from the JunoCam visible light imager and JIRAM have allowed Juno
scientists to observe the long-term movement of Jupiter’s massive northern
polar cyclone and the eight cyclones that encircle it. Unlike hurricanes on
Earth, which typically occur in isolation and at lower latitudes, Jupiter’s are
confined to the polar region.
By tracking the cyclones’ movements
across multiple orbits, the scientists observed that each storm gradually
drifts toward the pole due to a process called “beta drift” (the interaction
between the Coriolis force and the cyclone’s circular wind pattern). This is similar to how
hurricanes on our planet migrate, but Earthly cyclones break up before reaching
the pole due to the lack of warm, moist air needed to fuel them, as well as the
weakening of the Coriolis force near the poles. What’s more, Jupiter’s cyclones
cluster together while approaching the pole, and their motion slows as they
begin interacting with neighboring cyclones.
“These competing forces result in
the cyclones ‘bouncing’ off one another in a manner reminiscent of springs in a
mechanical system,” said Yohai Kaspi, a Juno co-investigator from the Weizmann
Institute of Science in Israel. “This interaction not only stabilizes the
entire configuration, but also causes the cyclones to oscillate around their
central positions, as they slowly drift westward, clockwise, around the pole.”
The new atmospheric model helps
explain the motion of cyclones not only on Jupiter, but potentially on other
planets, including Earth.
“One of the great things about Juno
is its orbit is ever-changing, which means we get a new vantage point each time
as we perform a science flyby,” said Bolton. “In the extended mission, that means we’re continuing to go where no spacecraft has gone before,
including spending more time in the strongest planetary radiation belts in the
solar system. It’s a little scary, but we’ve built Juno like a tank and are learning more about this intense
environment each time we go through it.”
More About
Juno
NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, a
division of Caltech in Pasadena, California, manages the Juno mission for the
principal investigator, Scott 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. The Italian Space Agency funded the
Jovian InfraRed Auroral Mapper. Lockheed Martin Space in Denver built and
operates the spacecraft. Various other institutions around the U.S. provided
several of the other scientific instruments on Juno.
More information about Juno is at: https://www.nasa.gov/juno
Source: NASA’s Juno Mission Gets Under Jupiter’s and Io’s Surface - NASA
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