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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 ...
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.
The Juno spacecraft did not take all the images it was supposed to during a flyby of Jupiter on January 22. NASA says it will look into the problem. Juno is an orbiter that launched to Jupiter ...
Jupiter’s southern hemisphere was captured by the JunoCam imager aboard NASA’s Juno orbiter after the camera returned to normal operation following an issue that occurred during its Jan. 22 ...
The Juno spacecraft is expected to make another close flyby on February 3, 2024, in which the orbiter will once again come within 930 miles of the volcanic surface.
NASA is scouring engineering data taken by the orbiter's JunoCam in order to understand why the majority of images from the spacecraft were not acquired. The missing data is from Juno's most ...