TURNS OUT JUNO IS STILL STUCK IN THE WRONG ORBIT AROUND JUPITER
Thanks to engine troubles, Juno is stuck
in a stable orbit around Jupiter, but not the one NASA scientists want.
Things are really not going Juno's way.
The spacecraft made a
triumphant arrival to Jupiter
last July 4 and promptly settled into a stable orbit. But now it's having
trouble getting out of that orbit.
On October 14, NASA announced it would
postpone that week's planned attempt to move Juno into a closer orbit in order
to study the planet. NASA identified the problem as a pair of helium check
valves that assist in firing the spacecraft's main engines. Rather than opening
in seconds, as they're supposed to, it took several minutes for the valves to
open during a test leading up to the planned engine burn.
The new orbit would shorten Juno's trips
around Jupiter from almost two months to about two weeks, allowing for closer
-- and more frequent -- flybys. This "science orbit" was intended to
be the spacecraft's final orbit, the result of its final engine burn. After 20
months spent studying the planet, Juno would have plummeted into Jupiter and
burned up in February 2018. The fiery death would avoid the accidental
contamination of any potential life on Jupiter's moons with our Earthly
bacteria.
It's not clear what the next step for the
mission is. Juno's next opportunity to enter its science orbit will be on
December 11. But NASA recently
confirmedthat it would instead be a "science flyby."
Rather than settle into a new orbit, Juno will switch on all its instruments
and point them at the planet to gather data, much like it did back
in August.
After that, the
next opportunities to enter a tighter orbit are February 2 and March 27, but
NASA won't commit to any of the dates until they have a chance to try and fix
the valve problem.
If worst comes to
worst, Juno will be stuck in its 53 day orbit for the duration of the mission.
The mission scientists don't expect this to be much of a problem, though.
"We can do all of our science in a 53-day orbit if needed," principle
investigator Scott Bolton said during a recent press conference in Pasadena. It
can collect the same data while in its more distant orbit, though the time
crunch may mean collecting less of it.
Juno's mission is
to study the origin and evolution of Jupiter, our solar system's oldest and
largest planet by far, by probing the planet's atmosphere, mapping magnetic
fields, and examining its auroras with a plethora of scientific equipment. It's
also solar-powered, setting a new
deep-space recordfor a solar-powered spacecraft.
It's so impressive
that we named it the
most important aerospace inventionthis year, in anticipation of the
scientific understanding it would provide of our largest planetary neighbor.
Here's to hoping a pair of pesky valves don't deflate Juno's potential too
much.
[H/T Gizmodo]
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