With just
one year remaining in a five-year trek to Jupiter, the team of NASA's Juno
mission is hard at work preparing for the spacecraft's expedition to the solar
system's largest planet. The mission aims to reveal the story of Jupiter's formation
and details of its interior structure. Data from Juno will provide insights
about our solar system's beginnings, and what we learn from the mission will
also enrich scientists' understanding of giant planets around other stars.
Juno is scheduled
to arrive at Jupiter on July 4, 2016 (Pacific Daylight Time). Once it settles
into orbit, the spacecraft will brave the hazards of Jupiter's intense
radiation when it repeatedly approaches within a few thousand miles, or
kilometers, of the cloud tops to collect its data.
Juno
is the first mission dedicated to the study of a giant planet's interior, which
it will do by mapping the planet's magnetic and gravity fields. The mission
will also map the abundance of water vapor in the planet's atmosphere,
providing the key to understanding which of several theories about the planet's
formation is likely the correct one. In addition, Juno will travel through the previously unexplored
region above the planet's poles, collecting the first images from there, along
with data about electromagnetic forces and high-energy particles in the
environment.
Although
other spacecraft have previously visited Jupiter, the space around the planet
is full of unknowns, especially the regions above the poles. With these
challenges in mind, the Juno team has been busy fine-tuning their flight plan.
"We're
already more than 90 percent of the way to Jupiter, in terms of total distance
traveled," said Scott Bolton, Juno principal investigator at Southwest
Research Institute, San Antonio. "With a year to go, we're looking
carefully at our plans to make sure we're ready to make the most of our time
once we arrive."
Following a
detailed analysis by the Juno team, NASA recently approved changes to the
mission's flight plan at Jupiter. Instead of taking 11 days to orbit the
planet, Juno will now complete one revolution every 14 days. The difference in
orbit period will be accomplished by having Juno make a slightly shorter engine
burn than originally planned.
The revised
cadence will allow Juno to build maps of the planet's magnetic and gravity
fields in a way that will provide a global look at
the planet earlier in the mission than the original plan. Over successive
orbits, Juno will build a virtual web around Jupiter, making its gravity and
magnetic field maps as it passes over different longitudes from north to south.
The original plan would have required 15 orbits to map these forces globally,
with 15 more orbits filling in gaps to make the map complete. In the revised
plan, Juno will get very basic mapping coverage in just eight orbits. A new
level of detail will be added with each successive doubling of the number, at
16 and 32 orbits.
The
slightly longer orbit also will provide a few extra days between close
approaches to the planet for the team to react to unexpected conditions the
spacecraft might experience in the complex environment very close to Jupiter.
"We
have models that tell us what to expect, but the fact is that Juno is going to be
immersed in a strong and variable magnetic field and hazardous radiation, and it
will get closer to the planet than any previous orbiting spacecraft," said
Bolton. "Juno's experience could be different than what our models predict
-- that's part of what makes space exploration so exciting."
The revised
plan lengthens Juno's mission at Jupiter to 20 months instead of the original
15, and the spacecraft will now complete 32 orbits
instead of 30. But the extra time doesn't represent bonus science for the
mission -- rather, it's an effect of the longer orbital period and the change
in the way Juno builds its web around Jupiter. Basically, it will take Juno a
bit longer to collect the full data set the mission is after, but it will get a
low-resolution version of its final products earlier in the mission than originally
planned.
NASA
also recently approved a change to the spacecraft's initial orbit after Jupiter
arrival, called the capture orbit. The revised plan splits the originally
planned, 107-day-long capture orbit into two. The new approach will provide the
Juno team a sneak preview of their science activities, affording them an opportunity
to test the spacecraft's science instruments during a close approach to Jupiter
before beginning the actual science phase of the mission. The original scenario
called for an engine burn to ease Juno into Jupiter orbit, followed by a second
burn 107 days later, putting the spacecraft into an 11-day science orbit. In
the updated mission design, the orbit insertion burn is followed 53.5 days
later by a practice run at Jupiter with science instruments turned on, followed
by another 53.5-day orbit before the final engine burn that places Juno into
its new, 14-day science orbit.
In
addition to myriad preparations being made on the engineering side, Juno's
science team is also busy preparing to collect valuable data about the giant
planet's inner workings.
One piece of this science groundwork is a collection of images and spectra being
obtained by powerful ground-based telescopes and NASA's Hubble Space Telescope (spectra
are like chemical fingerprints of gases in the atmosphere). These data are
intended to provide big-picture context for Juno's up-close observations of
Jupiter, which is important for interpreting what the spacecraft's instruments
will see.
With the
countdown clock ticking -- this time, not toward launch, but toward arrival at
their destination -- the Juno team is acutely aware of how quickly they're
sneaking up on the giant planet. And their excitement is building.
"It's
been a busy cruise, but the journey has provided our team with valuable
experience flying the spacecraft and enhanced our confidence in Juno's design,"
said Rick Nybakken, Juno project manager at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory,
Pasadena, California. "Now it's time to gear up for Jupiter."
Juno is the
second mission chosen as part of NASA's New Frontiers program of frequent,
medium-class spacecraft missions that address high-priority exploration
initiatives in the solar system. NASA's New Horizons mission, which will soon
encounter Pluto, is the first New Frontiers mission; OSIRIS-REx is next in the
lineup, slated to launch in 2016.
NASA's Jet
Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, California, manages the Juno mission for the
principal investigator, Scott Bolton, of Southwest Research Institute in San Antonio.
The New Frontiers Program is managed at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in
Huntsville, Alabama. Lockheed Martin Space Systems, Denver, built the
spacecraft. JPL is a division of the California Institute of Technology in
Pasadena.
For more information about Juno visit:
http://www.nasa.gov/juno
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