Europa is arguably the place with the best prospects for life outside the Earth in the entire Solar System, so it’s amazing this is the first close approach in 22 years.
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The first image from Juno's only close flyby of Europa is
already being closely analyzed, including the finding of a possible impact
crater. Image Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/SwRI/MSSS/Kevin M. Gill |
The Juno spacecraft has returned the first images taken
during a flyby yesterday from just 352 kilometers (219 miles) above the surface
of Jupiter's icy moon Europa. The flyby, which was closer than most satellites
are to the Earth, is an effort both to learn more about the enigmatic world and
to move to a tighter orbit around Jupiter.
The year 2000 was just three days old the last time a
spacecraft made a close approach to Europa, as the Galileo mission swooped low
over its icy surface. The discoveries made then about Jupiter’s fourth largest
moon confirmed its status as one of the worlds of most interest to
astrobiologists looking for potential life in the Solar System. Nevertheless,
prospects for a century of exploration have been slow to come to fruition.
The new images taken by Juno will be studied for a long time
to come and probably launch hundreds of scientific papers – it will be a
minimum of eight years before another spacecraft makes a close approach.
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The icy surface of Europa as captured by Juno during the
flyby on September 29, 2022. Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/SWRI/MSSS |
Already the images collected from JunoCam provide a higher
resolution – 1 kilometer (0.6 miles) per pixel – than those taken by Galileo,
even though Juno’s minimum distance was a kilometer further from the surface.
Imaging technology has improved a lot in two decades, and astronomers expect to
learn a lot from the observations. After all, new discoveries are still being
made based on Galileo’s 20-year-old observations, and its images were
reprocessed to be much clearer only two years ago.
In addition to JunoCam, the spacecraft carries instruments
to see in the ultraviolet. radio, and microwave parts of the spectrum, as well
as gravity sensors and detectors of high-energy particles. Each of these could
produce important information from the experience of Europa’s vicinity.
“It’s very early in the process, but by all indications
Juno’s flyby of Europa was a great success,” said Scott Bolton of the Southwest
Research Institute in a NASA statement.
By photographing the terminator (the boundary between day
and night) JunoCam collected images containing long shadows, bringing out the
ridges and troughs that belie Europa’s larger-scale smoothness. The pit near
the terminator and just to the right of center may be a rare surviving impact
crater. Movements in Europa’s oceans are thought to cause shifts in the ice
which quickly degrade craters that would last for billions of years on most
other worlds, so if this is a crater it must be quite young.
The first pic of #Europa in twenty years.
— Paul Byrne (@ThePlanetaryGuy) September 29, 2022
Courtesy of @NASAJuno, processed by yours truly.
Look at the detail along the terminator 😍 pic.twitter.com/15Qvu4Otoc
Until the Voyager missions in 1979, Europa had been merely
the smallest and least interesting of Jupiter’s four big moons, four centuries
from its discovery. Voyager 1 passed it at a much greater distance than
Jupiter’s other three big moons, or even Amalthea since it wasn’t considered a
priority.
However, Voyager 2 revealed it to be the smoothest object in
the Solar System, caused by a crust of ice over an internal ocean. Science
fiction writers and astrobiologists alike started to consider the prospects for
life in the depths, particularly as prospects dimmed on Mars and Titan.
Plans began both for the Europa Clipper to focus on this one
moon alone, rather than sharing the spotlight with Jupiter and the other
satellites as with previous missions, and for a future lander.
Nevertheless, after Galileo’s 2000 close approach budget
constraints delayed further visits. Subsequent missions revealed internal
oceans are quite common among outer Solar System satellites, and even Pluto may
have one. Astrobiologists’ focus turned back to Mars and to Saturn's moon
Enceladus, whose active geysers increase the potential for sampling its ocean’s
composition.
Nevertheless, Europa is so potentially important
construction of the Europa Clipper is well underway and NASA continues to study
prospects for a lander. Although the Clipper is scheduled to launch in 2024, it
will need two gravity assists from Mars and Earth to get to Jupiter by 2030.
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