Juno (spacecraft)
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Earth flyby (9 October 2013)
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Approach Earth perigee
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Video of Juno's approach to the Earth-Moon system, taken by the star tracker system
Pre-Jupiter arrival (21 June 2016)
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Image taken on June 21, 2016, at a distance of 10.6 million km, during Juno's Jupiter pre-arrival phase
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Jupiter and the Galilean moons animation, composed by images taken during June 2016
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Red Spot spotted by Juno before arrival
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Last image taken before instruments were powered down for orbital insertion. Taken on June 29, 2016, distance 5.3 million km
Jupiter arrival (5 July 2016)
[edit]Orbital insertion at Jupiter. No images taken during Perijove 0 due to all the instruments being turned off during the orbit insertion phase.[1]
Post-Jupiter arrival (5 July 2016 - 27 August 2016)
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Image taken on July 10, 2016 from 4.3 million km
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Jupiter image taken on August 23, 2016 from 4.4 million km
Perijove 1 (27 August 2016)
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Approaching Jupiter's north pole
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Juno's Perijove 1 arrival and departure
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Jupiter's north pole
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Jupiter's south pole
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High resolution image of Jupiter's southern hemisphere
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JIRAM infrared image of Jupiter's southern aurora
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Jupiter's sunrise, an image created by scientist Alex Mai using JunoCam's data
Perijove 2 (19 October 2016)
[edit]No image had been taken due to Juno entered safe mode during Perijove 2.[2]
Perijove 3 (11 December 2016)
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Seventh of Jupiter's "string of pearls"
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Image of Jupiter's cloud tops
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Jupiter's blue cloud tops
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Juno's close look of Great Red Spot
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Jupiter pearl and swirling cloud tops
Perijove 4 (2 February 2017)
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Jupiter's north pole
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Jupiter's south pole
Perijove 5 (27 March 2017)
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Different atmospheric conditions in collide
Perijove 6 (19 May 2017)
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JunoCam's image of south polar region of Jupiter, at a distance of 46,900 km (29,100 mi)
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Jupiter's south pole storms
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Jupiter's southern hemisphere
Perijove 7 (11 July 2017)
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Jupiter's image from 16,535 km (10,274 mi)
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Jupiter and the Great Red Spot
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Jupiter's Great Red Spot just before pass
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Pass over Great Red Spot
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Jupiter's Great Red Spot just after pass
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Juno's eye on Jupiter
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Jupiter's equatorial region
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Jupiter south pole and southern hemisphere
Perijove 8 (1 September 2017)
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Amalthea's shadow of Jupiter
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Low resolution image of Jupiter's moon Io, processed by Roman Tkachenko
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This image shows two Galilean moons. Io is visible close to the planet, while another moon, Europa, is on the left side. Processed by Roman Tkachenko
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Io seen by JunoCam on 2 September 2017
Perijove 9 (24 October 2017)
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Juno's Perijove 9 southern hemisphere
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Jupiter's north blue clouds, taken from a distance of 18,906 km (11,748 mi)
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Perijove 9 departure, Io (right) and Europa (left) are visible
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3x enlarged image of Io, some details are visible
Perijove 10 (16 December 2017)
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Above Jupiter's cloud tops
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Jupiter south pole
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Jupiter south pole 2
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Jupiter south pole 3
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Io seen by Juno from an altitude of 338,007.7 km (210,028.2 mi) above Jupiter
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Infrared image of newly discovered heat source on Io
Perijove 11 (7 February 2018)
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Jupiter's southern latitudes
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Jupite's southern hemisphere
Perijove 12 (1 April 2018)
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Intricate clouds of Jupiter
Perijove 13 (23 May 2018)
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Chaotic clouds of Jupiter
Perijove 14 (16 July 2018)
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Jupiter seen from 36,034.5 km (22,390.8 mi)
Perijove 15 (6 September 2018)
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Jupiter seen from 89,500 km (55,600 mi)
Perijove 16 (29 October 2018)
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Flyby video of Jupiter
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Shape of a dolphin in Jupiter's clouds
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Jupiter from an altitude of 4,400 km (2,700 mi)
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Io on Jupiter's horizon
Perijove 17 (21 December 2018 )
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Plume near Io's terminator
Perijove 18 (12 February 2019)
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Jupiter with Great Red Spot
References
[edit]- ↑ Lakdawalla, Emily (9 June 2016). What to expect from JunoCam at Jupiter. Planetary.org. Retrieved on 1 October 2016.
- ↑ Agle, D. C. (19 October 2016). Juno Spacecraft in Safe Mode for Latest Jupiter Flyby. NASA. Archived from the original on 2023-04-06. Retrieved on 2019-06-17.