Spacecraft heads to Jupiter to explore possible ‘buried oceans’ on its icy moons

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 Jupiter
This image provided by the European Space Agency depicts the Jupiter Icy Moons Explorer, Juice, spacecraft orbiting the gas giant. (ESA/ATG Medialab via AP) AP

Spacecraft heads to Jupiter to explore possible ‘buried oceans’ on its icy moons

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The European Space Agency launched a robotic explorer on Friday on an Ariane rocket to explore Jupiter and three of its icy moons: Ganymede, Callisto, and Europa, for a decadelong journey.

The rocket took off on Friday morning from the Guiana Space Center in French Guiana on the coast of South America. It will take the spacecraft eight years to reach the solar system’s largest planet. The robotic explorer is called the JUpiter ICy moons Explorer or Juice. It will travel 4 billion miles in this mission and won’t reach Jupiter until July 2031.

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Scientists believe that Jupiter’s icy moons possibly harbor underground oceans that could provide clues to the search for the existence of life.

https://twitter.com/ESA_JUICE/status/1646835202067505153

No spacecraft has ever orbited a moon other than Earth’s, making this robotic explorer’s journey a historic orbit when it will orbit Jupiter’s Ganymede. In 2021, NASA‘s Juno spacecraft performed a flyby of the largest moon in our solar system.

The massive natural satellite Ganymede is less than half the size of Earth, and much of its mass is due to the high amounts of ice and silica-based rocks. It is the only moon in our solar system to have a magnetosphere, a magnetic field capable of mitigating or blocking the effects of solar radiation or cosmic radiation, which can help protect living organisms from the detrimental effects of solar wind pressure.

While Juice is targeting Jupiter’s icy moons for its exploration, there are 95 moons orbiting Jupiter.

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“This is a mission that is answering questions of science that are burning to all of us,” Josef Aschbacher, European Space Agency’s director general, said. “Of course, one of these questions is: Is there life out there?”

Jupiter’s moon Europa is reported to have water-vapor geysers erupting into space. The Callisto moon is believed to be a possible destination for humans because of its distance from the gas giant planet’s radiation belts

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