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Happy New Year, Europa

On the eve of another extended mission, NASA's Galileo spacecraft swooped past Jupiter's icy moon Europa at an altitude of 351 kilometers.

BASED ON NASA/JPL STATUS REPORTS


the surface of EuropaJan 3, 2000: NASA's Galileo spacecraft has kicked off the new year with a successful flyby of Jupiter's icy moon Europa. The spacecraft swooped past Europa at an altitude of 351 kilometers (218 miles) at 10:38 a.m. Pacific Standard Time on January 3, 2000.

JPL reports that the spacecraft is operating normally, and it appears that its instruments have completed their observations of the magnetic fields and charged particles around Europa. These observations were designed to detect any magnetic disturbances that may occur because of electrical currents set up in an ocean that may lie beneath Europa's icy crust. The prospect of a liquid ocean on Europa is intriguing, since water is one of the ingredients essential for life.

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Above: This alluring color image of Europa's surface was produced by combining low resolution color data with higher resolution mosaics recorded during three separate flybys and covers about 120 by 150 miles. The eerie terrain of grooved linear ridges and crustal plates which seem to have broken apart and rafted into new positions could indicate subsurface water or slush. [more information]

Because Galileo passed behind Europa during the flyby, its radio signal to Earth was blocked for a while. Scientists took advantage of this situation by studying the way the radio signal changed as the spacecraft entered this "silent zone." These radio science experiments teach us more about Europa's ionosphere -- the region of charged particles surrounding the moon -- and any possible atmosphere.

Observations of three of Jupiter's small natural satellites -- Amalthea, Thebe, and Metis -- are planned for Galileo later on Jan. 3, with observations of Jupiter's volcanic moon Io on the spacecraft's agenda for the early morning of Jan. 4. All data gathered during this flyby are being stored on Galileo's onboard tape recorder. They will be transmitted to Earth during the coming weeks.

inner moons of Jupiter


Above:The potato-shaped inner moons of Jupiter are lined-up in this mosaic "family portrait" of these tiny Jovian satellites. Left to right in increasing order of distance from Jupiter are Metis (longest dimension 37 miles), Adrastea (12 miles), Amalthea (154 miles), and Thebe (72 miles). All these moons orbit in the zone between Io and Jupiter's rings, are bombarded by high-energy ions within the Jovian magnetosphere. More information.

NASA Headquarters has agreed in principle to extend the Galileo mission past its planned January 31 finale. Details of funding and itinerary for the new extended mission, to be called the Galileo Millennium Mission, must still be resolved. Monday's Europa encounter took place January 3, 2000, and is technically still part of the current, extended Galileo Europa Mission. Another Io flyby is planned for February 22, with flybys of Ganymede on May 30 and December 28, and joint observations of Jupiter with the Cassini spacecraft in December 2000.

Galileo has been orbiting Jupiter and its moons since December 1995, beaming to Earth unprecedented images and other information. JPL, a division of the California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA, manages the Galileo mission for NASA's Office of Space Science, Washington, DC.



Web Links

Galileo Mission Home Page -from NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory

Divining Water on Europa -Science@NASA feature story about the possibility of water on Jupiter's icy moon

Thursday's Classroom -educational lesson plans and classroom activities about Europa and life in extreme environments.

 


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