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The volcanic world of Jupiter's moon Io can be seen in extraordinary detail in new images beamed from NASA’s Juno orbiter after its most recent flyby.. The encounter was Juno's second with Io ...
NASA’s Juno orbiter has returned its latest batch of images of giant Jupiter, which are as impressive as ever. Despite suffering from radiation damage earlier this year, its JunoCam camera ...
Close-ups of Jupiter and its gorgeous cloud-tops star in the latest batch of images sent back from NASA’s Juno orbiter. Launched in 2011 and at Jupiter since 2016, Juno orbits the giant planet ...
Juno has shown that the volcano is still going, spewing a plume of gas and dust high above the night side of Io. Fresh from Jupiter, we have new views of its active moon Io, thanks to the # ...
For nine years, a spacecraft known as the Juno orbiter has divided its time between observing the gas giant of Jupiter and studying its moons, including Io. And on its third flyby of the celestial ...
When the robotic Juno orbiter zoomed past Io in December, it was the closest flyby of the moon since the Galileo mission over 20 years ago.
When NASA's Juno orbiter swooped close to a Jupiter moon, it saw a pair of volcanic plumes spurting material into space, something the robotic spacecraft hadn't captured before. The plumes rise ...
Juno is an orbiter that launched to Jupiter from Earth in August 2011. Since its arrival at the gas giant in 2016, the spacecraft has made 48 flybys of the planet, ...
Juno, an "orbiter," launched Aug. 5, 2011, and arrived at Jupiter in 2016 to explore the Jovian System, according to NASA's webpage dedicated to the mission and the craft.
Earlier this month, NASA's Juno orbiter conducted its closest flyby yet of the moon for an up-close view of its volcanic activity. What if found was extraordinary: erupting plumes of volcanic ...
NASA's Juno spacecraft captured a pair of volcanic plumes blasting material into space. Instruments on the orbiter are shedding new light on Jupiter moon Io.