Juno development, launch, and cruise, Including Earth flyby imaging Oct 9 2013 |
Juno development, launch, and cruise, Including Earth flyby imaging Oct 9 2013 |
Apr 3 2006, 09:57 PM
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Member Group: Members Posts: 172 Joined: 17-March 06 Member No.: 709 |
I thought that it was time to start a new thread devoted to the JUNO Jupiter
Orbiter mission. This New Frontiers Mission #2 seems to be a "stealth" project with little information available on the Web. In fact, the official NASA JUNO web site is quite pitiful. It contains the minimal amount of information on what seems to be an intriguing mission, in terms of both science and engineering. Does the UMSF community have information on this mission that has not been widely seen before? Another Phil |
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Guest_BruceMoomaw_* |
Apr 4 2006, 06:59 PM
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Guests |
Or just turn to that address for the overall JPL Technical Papers site and type in "juno" in the search window. (This same technique works for lots of other interesting JPL papers, too.)
I have a few crumbs more information about this mission besides those in the article, which I'll reprint here as soon as I get over this damn headache. One thing we had better purge purselves of, though, is the hope that it will do any significant studies of the Galilean moons. It's designed to study Jupiter -- period -- and its orbit and mission duration make it almost impossible for it to study anything else (except for long-range studies of Io's ionosphere and torus). |
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