NASA's Juno probe beams back razor-sharp images of Jupiter's moon Ganymede

Orbiting Jupiter, NASA's Juno spacecraft streaked past Ganymede on Monday, beaming back the first close-up views of the largest moon in the solar system since the Galileo orbiter last flew past in 2000.

"This is the closest any spacecraft has come to this mammoth moon in a generation," Scott Bolton, the Juno principal investigator at the Southwest Research Institute, said in a statement. "We are going to take our time before we draw any scientific conclusions, but until then we can simply marvel at this celestial wonder, the only moon in our solar system bigger than the planet Mercury."

NASA's Juno spacecraft captured high-resolution views of Jupiter's moon Ganymede during a flyby Monday at an altitude of about 645 miles. The flyby was the first close-up look at the big moon since NASA's Galileo orbiter flew past for the last time in 2000. NASA/JPL-Caltech/SwRI/MSSS

Juno raced by Ganymede at 1:35 p.m. EDT Monday, passing within about 645 miles of the moon and capturing a razor-sharp view of the cratered world, thought to harbor a sub-surface sea beneath an icy crust. Along with capturing fresh images, Juno's suite of science instruments also collected data.

"Ganymede's ice shell has some light and dark regions, suggesting that some areas may be pure ice while other areas contain dirty ice," Bolton said before the flyby. Juno "will provide the first in-depth investigation of how the composition and structure of the ice varies with depth, leading to a better understanding of how the ice shell forms and the ongoing processes that resurface the ice over time."

Juno was launched from Cape Canaveral in 2011 and braked into orbit around Jupiter on July 4, 2016. Still going strong at the end of its initial two-year primary mission, NASA has now approved two extensions, the latest running from this summer to mid-2025.

Built to study Jupiter's deep interior, its atmosphere, magnetic field and aurorae, Juno has made repeated close passes over the planet's north polar regions, providing startling views of never-before-seen polar storms, detecting signs of a somewhat diffuse core and collecting gigabytes of data to better understand the planet's overall behavior.

The probe's 53-day polar orbit was set up to slowly move the point of closest approach northward as the flight progresses. On the far side of the orbit, the spacecraft initially crossed the equatorial plane well beyond the orbit of Ganymede.

But the point of closest approach has moved inward throughout the mission and the latest extension provided a golden opportunity to make close flybys of Ganymede, Europa and volcanic Io.

A slightly higher-resolution view of Ganymede's far side, illuminated by sunlight scattered from Jupiter's atmosphere, shows the surface "wrinkles" in more detail. NASA/JPL-Caltech/SwRI

"We're going to cross the orbital plane near Ganymede and as the orbit keeps progressing farther and farther north, the (equatorial) crossing moves farther and farther in," Bolton said in an earlier interview. "So first, we cross near Ganymede and then we keep moving in and we cross near Europa. Eventually we cross near Io, and then we're even inside of Io."

The Ganymede encounter Monday was set up to use the moon's gravity to bend the trajectory slightly, reducing Juno's orbital period by about 10 days. That, in turn, sets up a flyby of icy Europa on September 29, 2022, and two close flybys of Io on December 30, 2023, and February 3, 2024.

"So we have these close flybys of the satellites that are going to allow us to now point our instruments at the satellites, get the first close-up analysis and look for changes since the days of Galileo and Voyager," Bolton said.

Juno is not equipped with a telescope for close-up, narrow-angle observations. Instead, its "Junocam" imager was intended primarily for wide-angle, contextual observations and public outreach, providing spectacular hemispheric views of Jupiter's turbulent atmosphere.

Bolton expects equally stunning views from the Ganymede, Europa and Io flybys.

"When we're really far away, we can't make a high-resolution shot," he said. "But when we're close up, we get a wide field of view at high resolution." That wide field of view, he said, "makes all the difference when you're looking at it, saying do I understand the context?"

Junocam captured almost an entire side of Ganymede during the probe's flyby Monday. Shots using different filters will be combined later to provide color views, resolving surface features as small as six-tenths of a mile across.

Juno's navigation camera captured a more zoomed-in view of Ganymede's dark side, illuminated by sunlight reflected from Jupiter. Additional images stored on board the spacecraft will be beamed back later.

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