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Juno Science Results
Phil Stooke
post Feb 12 2022, 12:12 AM
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This session at LPSC:

https://www.hou.usra.edu/meetings/lpsc2022/...ram.htm#sess305

has some good things from Juno at Jupiter (and a few Pluto goodies).

JIRAM infrared results for Io volcanoes
Ganymede aurora observations
Geology from Juno images
topographic mapping from Juno stereo - including a large dome.

There was some discussion earlier about whether Juno images of Ganymede would be scientifically useful, and they certainly were.

Phil


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Marcin600
post Dec 17 2022, 09:22 PM
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AGU22 Press Conference: The Latest Science Results from NASA’s Juno Mission to Jupiter, December 14, 2022
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bbGgwr-Qq-Y
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vjkane
post Dec 17 2022, 11:15 PM
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QUOTE (Marcin600 @ Dec 17 2022, 01:22 PM) *
AGU22 Press Conference: The Latest Science Results from NASA’s Juno Mission to Jupiter, December 14, 2022
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bbGgwr-Qq-Y

I sat in on the press conference (but was at the conference for the science portion). Was surprised at how few press members were there. I think that about all of them are in the video (I'm in a back corner and not visible).


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Brian Swift
post Dec 18 2022, 01:31 AM
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QUOTE (Marcin600 @ Dec 17 2022, 01:22 PM) *
AGU22 Press Conference: The Latest Science Results from NASA’s Juno Mission to Jupiter, December 14, 2022
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bbGgwr-Qq-Y

Thanks. I didn't know the project is no longer planning an active disposal of Juno into Jupiter, and that funding will continue until Juno fails due to accumulated radiation degradation or it runs out of fuel which is needed to point the high gain antenna at Earth to return data. This discussion was at the end of the press conference starting here https://youtu.be/bbGgwr-Qq-Y?t=2382
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stevesliva
post Nov 9 2023, 10:17 PM
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Ganymede science results in Nature
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Tom Tamlyn
post Nov 9 2023, 11:25 PM
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QUOTE (Brian Swift @ Dec 17 2022, 09:31 PM) *
Thanks. I didn't know the project is no longer planning an active disposal of Juno into Jupiter, and that funding will continue until Juno fails due to accumulated radiation degradation or it runs out of fuel which is needed to point the high gain antenna at Earth to return data. This discussion was at the end of the press conference starting here https://youtu.be/bbGgwr-Qq-Y?t=2382


Thanks Brian, that snippet was interesting. Apparently (and subject to review now in progress), the mission planners are satisfied that, because of the way Juno's orbit has precessed during the extended mission, it is no longer possible for Juno to plunge into Europa.

I had understood that chaotic orbital mechanics means that you can "never say never," but I guess the point is that Juno will impact Jupiter at some point, and while it's probably not possible to say when, it is possible to say that it will happen before chaos has a chance to do something really bizarre that would put Europa at risk of an impact with Juno.

Also interesting to hear that NASA apparently gave Juno an open-ended financial commitment, which I gather is not usually the done thing.
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vjkane
post Nov 11 2023, 12:33 AM
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QUOTE (Tom Tamlyn @ Nov 9 2023, 04:25 PM) *
Thanks Brian, that snippet was interesting. Apparently (and subject to review now in progress), the mission planners are satisfied that, because of the way Juno's orbit has precessed during the extended mission, it is no longer possible for Juno to plunge into Europa.

At a recent meeting (I forget which one), Bolton said that they could tweak the orbits for additional Io observations. Presumably this uses fuel faster.

However, once the Io encounters are over, I wonder if the team will adopt a strategy of fuel conservation to extend observations as long as possible. I'm sure this is utterly unrealistic, but it would be awesome if Juno was still operating when Clipper and JUICE arrive to provide fields and particles observations from a third location within the magnetosphere.

The next OPAG meeting is in a couple of weeks I believe, and there will be an update on the Juno meeting. I expect a focus on the upcoming Io encounters but perhaps there will be a slide on longer term plans.


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volcanopele
post Nov 13 2023, 05:42 PM
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New paper about Juno JIRAM science results from my NF Data Analysis program group!

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41550-023-02123-5


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nprev
post Nov 14 2023, 01:27 AM
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Congratulations on the paper; nicely done!

Interesting. I would have expected Io to be much more homogeneous not far below the surface. Always thought of it as basically a molten ball with a thin crust and a solid core.


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