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After journeying for nearly five years to our solar system’s largest planet, NASA’s Juno spacecraft has sent back the first images of Jupiter’s north pole and the auroras rippling across its southern pole.
The images were taken during the spacecraft’s first flyby of the planet with its instruments switched on, NASA said in a statement on Friday.
Juno successfully executed the first of 36 orbital flybys on 27 August when the spacecraft came about 4,200 kilometres above Jupiter’s swirling clouds.
The images show storm systems and weather activity unlike anything previously seen on any of our solar system’s gas-giant planets, NASA said.
Along with JunoCam snapping pictures during the flyby, all eight of Juno’s science instruments were energised and collecting data.
The Jovian Infrared Auroral Mapper (JIRAM), supplied by the Italian Space Agency, acquired some remarkable images of Jupiter at its north and south polar regions in infrared wavelengths.
“JIRAM is getting under Jupiter’s skin, giving us our first infrared close-ups of the planet,” said Alberto Adriani, JIRAM co-investigator from Istituto di Astrofisica e Planetologia Spaziali, Rome.
“These first infrared views of Jupiter’s north and south poles are revealing warm and hot spots that have never been seen before. And while we knew that the first-ever infrared views of Jupiter’s south pole could reveal the planet’s southern aurora, we were amazed to see it for the first time,” Adriani said.
The Juno spacecraft launched on August 5, 2011, from Cape Canaveral, Florida and arrived at Jupiter on July 4, 2016.
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