NASA's Juno Spacecraft Is Halfway to Jupiter
Source: Space.com
A NASA spacecraft has hit the halfway mark of its five-year voyage to the solar system's largest planet: Jupiter.
The odometer on NASA's Juno probe clicked over to 880 million miles (1.415 billion kilometers) on Monday (Aug. 12), space agency officials said. That means the spacecraft is halfway to Jupiter, at least in terms of distance traveled, they added.
The $1.1 billion Juno mission launched in August 2011 and will arrive at the Jovian system in July 2016. The probe is taking an indirect, looping path to its destination, with a close Earth flyby scheduled two months from now to provide a dramatic speed boost.
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The 8,000-pound (3,267 kilograms) Juno probe is the first solar-powered spacecraft ever to visit the outer solar system.Juno has three huge solar arrays, each of which is the size of a tractor-trailer.
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Read more: http://news.yahoo.com/nasas-juno-spacecraft-halfway-jupiter-220428505.html
awoke_in_2003
(34,582 posts)exactly where a planetary body will be at any given time truly amazes me- yay science.
bananas
(27,509 posts)It's halfway in terms of total distance travelled, not straight-line distance.
"The Earth flyby will give Juno a kick in the pants, boosting its velocity by 16,330 mph (26,280 km/h)," Nybakken added. "From there, it's 'Next stop, Jupiter.'"