After a 5-year journey, NASA's Juno probe is in orbit around Jupiter

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PASADENA, Calif. — NASA's pioneering Juno probe to Jupiter has survived a harrowing ride to enter into orbit around the huge planet, the agency announced at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) on Monday.
The celebration followed a nail-biting Fourth of July for scientists and engineers at JPL, where the spacecraft is being monitored following a five-year journey to Jupiter
Juno is now officially the first probe to orbit Jupiter since the end of the Galileo mission in 2003. The probe will take the highest-ever resolution images of the giant planet, and possibly even discover new moons orbiting the gigantic world.
"Welcome to Jupiter," one of the mission controllers said when orbit was confirmed.
To get into the proper orbit for its scientific mission, Juno's onboard system executed a precise 35-minute rocket engine burn that delivered it through Jupiter's extreme radiation belts and into an orbit around its poles.
Mission control at JPL erupted in clapping and relieved handshakes when it was confirmed that the burn was completed.
Now that Juno is in its prescribed orbit, scientists will use it to learn more about Jupiter than ever before.

More science (and moons) than ever before

During its 20-month-mission, the spacecraft will skim only 3,000 miles above Jupiter's cloud tops to gather data about its interior. It will also explore the planet's extreme auroras.
Don't expect to see a slew of new images quite yet, however. 

The spacecraft's cameras are turned off currently to protect its sensitive equipment, and will turn on in a few days. The most impressive images Juno will beam back should be captured in August when the probe flies closer to the giant world.
Juno will also likely discover more moons orbiting Jupiter, which already plays host to more than 60 known natural satellites.
"I think there's no question we will probably discover new moons of Jupiter," Juno principal investigator Scott Bolton said during a news conference at JPL.
"Obviously I can't tell you where to look to find those [moons], but I expect that we will see some and the number will keep going up."
The as yet undiscovered moons may be hiding in orbits never explored by human-built spacecraft or telescopes, but Juno could be the one to find them.

Learning about our beginnings

Scientists want to know more about how Jupiter's magnetic fields are formed and its structure in order to piece together the history of the solar system.
Jupiter was likely one of the first planets to form in this part of space, and it may have influenced the orbits of every other planet we see in the solar system today. But scientists still aren't exactly sure what that means for our cosmic history.
Was Jupiter on its way to being another star 4 billion years ago when the solar system formed? Did Jupiter migrate in towards the sun after forming farther out? What are the mechanics of Jupiter's extreme auroras, the most powerful in the solar system?
Hopefully Juno will provide some answers to those mysteries and many more by using its scientific instrumentation.
"Juno is searching for hints about our beginnings," Juno principal investigator Scott Bolton said during a press conference earlier Monday. "These secrets are well-guarded by Jupiter."

Surviving a terrifying journey

Scientists and engineers were particularly nervous about Juno's orbital insertion because of Jupiter's extreme radiation environment. 
To help protect the sensitive instrumentation onboard, NASA built a vault in an attempt keep a good deal of harmful radiation away from the science-gathering
After a 5-year journey, NASA's Juno probe is in orbit around Jupiter After a 5-year journey, NASA's Juno probe is in orbit around Jupiter Reviewed by Unknown on 07:06:00 Rating: 5

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