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ShellyFri May-26-17 02:36 PM
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"Juno Mission to Jupiter Surprising Results"


  

          

NASA's Juno mission, led by Southwest Research Institute's Dr. Scott Bolton, is rewriting what scientists thought they knew about Jupiter specifically, and gas giants in general, according to a pair of Science papers released today. The Juno spacecraft has been in orbit around Jupiter since July 2016, passing within 3,000 miles of the equatorial cloudtops.

"What we've learned so far is earth-shattering. Or should I say, Jupiter-shattering," said Bolton, Juno's principal investigator. "Discoveries about its core, composition, magnetosphere, and poles are as stunning as the photographs the mission is generating."

The solar-powered spacecraft's eight scientific instruments are designed to study Jupiter's interior structure, atmosphere, and magnetosphere. Two instruments developed and led by SwRI are working in concert to study Jupiter's auroras, the greatest light show in the solar system. The Jovian Auroral Distributions Experiment (JADE) is a set of sensors detecting the electrons and ions associated with Jupiter's auroras. The Ultraviolet Imaging Spectrograph (UVS) examines the auroras in UV light to study Jupiter's upper atmosphere and the particles that collide with it. Scientists expected to find similarities to Earth's auroras, but Jovian auroral processes are proving puzzling.

"Although many of the observations have terrestrial analogs, it appears that different processes are at work creating the auroras," said SwRI's Dr. Phil Valek, JADE instrument lead. "With JADE we've observed plasmas upwelling from the upper atmosphere to help populate Jupiter's magnetosphere. However, the energetic particles associated with Jovian auroras are very different from those that power the most intense auroral emissions at Earth."

Also surprising, Jupiter's signature bands disappear near its poles. JunoCam images show a chaotic scene of swirling storms up to the size of Mars towering above a bluish backdrop. Since the first observations of these belts and zones many decades ago, scientists have wondered how far beneath the gas giant's swirling façade these features persist. Juno's microwave sounding instrument reveals that topical weather phenomena extend deep below the cloudtops, to pressures of 100 bars, 100 times Earth's air pressure at sea level.

"However, there's a north-south asymmetry. The depths of the bands are distributed unequally," Bolton said. "We've observed a narrow ammonia-rich plume at the equator. It resembles a deeper, wider version of the air currents that rise from Earth's equator and generate the trade winds."

Juno is mapping Jupiter's gravitational and magnetic fields to better understand the planet's interior structure and measure the mass of the core. Scientists think a dynamo—a rotating, convecting, electrically conducting fluid in a planet's outer core—is the mechanism for generating the planetary magnetic fields.

"Juno's gravity field measurements differ significantly from what we expected, which has implications for the distribution of heavy elements in the interior, including the existence and mass of Jupiter's core," Bolton said. The magnitude of the observed magnetic field was 7.766 Gauss, significantly stronger than expected. But the real surprise was the dramatic spatial variation in the field, which was significantly higher than expected in some locations, and markedly lower in others. "We characterized the field to estimate the depth of the dynamo region, suggesting that it may occur in a molecular hydrogen layer above the pressure-induced transition to the metallic state."

Shelly

  

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lenjackFri May-26-17 07:50 PM
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#1. "RE: Juno Mission to Jupiter Surprising Results"
In response to Shelly (Reply # 0)


          

Interesting, but am I in the wrong forum?

  

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KJTFri May-26-17 08:26 PM
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#2. "RE: Juno Mission to Jupiter Surprising Results"
In response to lenjack (Reply # 1)


  

          

Quote:
am I in the wrong forum?


Could be. Which forum did you want to be in.

I like having two forums but I doubt that way back when the OT was created, that if there had been so few daily posts, that it would have been added.

We members who post a lot, have all probably posted to the wrong forum - I know I have.

Maybe Shelly or one of the other moderators will move this to the OT.

Jim.

  

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SidFri May-26-17 09:41 PM
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#3. "RE: Juno Mission to Jupiter Surprising Results"
In response to KJT (Reply # 2)


          

Must say, I'm happy Shelly posted it here because I probably would have missed it in the OT forum which I do not regularly visit, even though I know I'm missing a lot by not doing so.

.
Onward & Upward !
Sid

WINDOWS 10
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SidFri May-26-17 09:41 PM
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#4. "RE: Juno Mission to Jupiter Surprising Results"
In response to KJT (Reply # 2)


          

Must say, I'm happy Shelly posted it here because I probably would have missed it in the OT forum which I do not regularly visit, even though I know I'm missing a lot by not doing so.

.
Onward & Upward !
Sid

WINDOWS 10
ASUS P8Z77-V Pro MB
Intel i5 3750K CPU
8g Corsair Vengeance DDR3 RAM
Corsair Neutron 250g SSD

  

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lenjackFri May-26-17 09:43 PM
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#5. "RE: Juno Mission to Jupiter Surprising Results"
In response to KJT (Reply # 2)


          

Don't get me wrong. The topic is definitely of interest to me. I just didn't expect to see it here.

  

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KJTFri May-26-17 10:06 PM
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#6. "RE: Juno Mission to Jupiter Surprising Results"
In response to lenjack (Reply # 5)


  

          

"To err is human".

Jim.

  

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SidSat May-27-17 12:37 AM
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#7. "RE: Juno Mission to Jupiter Surprising Results"
In response to Sid (Reply # 4)


          

Dang! There it goes again! My post repeated itself. I am suspecting my mouse (Logitech MX) and have plugged in a USB-corded one to check.

.
Onward & Upward !
Sid

WINDOWS 10
ASUS P8Z77-V Pro MB
Intel i5 3750K CPU
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Corsair Neutron 250g SSD

  

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SidSat May-27-17 12:37 AM
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#8. "RE: Juno Mission to Jupiter Surprising Results"
In response to Sid (Reply # 4)


          

Dang! There it goes again! My post repeated itself. I am suspecting my mouse (Logitech MX) and have plugged in a USB-corded one to check.

.
Onward & Upward !
Sid

WINDOWS 10
ASUS P8Z77-V Pro MB
Intel i5 3750K CPU
8g Corsair Vengeance DDR3 RAM
Corsair Neutron 250g SSD

  

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SidSat May-27-17 12:39 AM
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#9. "RE: Juno Mission to Jupiter Surprising Results"
In response to Sid (Reply # 8)
Sat May-27-17 12:40 AM by Sid

          

I may have inadvertently double clicked that last time with the "new" mouse.

.
Onward & Upward !
Sid

WINDOWS 10
ASUS P8Z77-V Pro MB
Intel i5 3750K CPU
8g Corsair Vengeance DDR3 RAM
Corsair Neutron 250g SSD

  

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jbmcmillanSat May-27-17 01:28 AM
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#10. "RE: Juno Mission to Jupiter Surprising Results"
In response to Sid (Reply # 9)


          

lol that's what I meant in the one post when I said I'm seeing double.

  

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