Voting
Welcome!
Juno is in a 53-day orbit. When it passes close to Jupiter (“PeriJove”
or “PJ”) we will take as many pictures as we can. The number of pictures that we take is
limited by the amount of onboard data storage that we have for JunoCam, so we
have to be selective. The images are
collected as we go from the north pole of Jupiter to the south pole, which
happens in a brief 2 hour portion of the orbit.
On any given perijove pass we will only be able to image targets in a
narrow swath of territory the spacecraft flies over (“groundtrack”).
Juno’s orbit geometry is evolving so we will carry out campaigns rather than voting on specific targets. Campaigns are focused on a specific science theme and take advantage of the changes in lighting.
Juno’s orbit geometry is evolving so we will carry out campaigns rather than voting on specific targets. Campaigns are focused on a specific science theme and take advantage of the changes in lighting.
What happened to Voting?
Up through PJ8 everyone could vote on their favorite Point
of Interest (POI) and those rounds can be viewed here. Changes in the orbit and mission plan mean
that we are no longer selecting targets by vote.
There will still be a voting page for every orbit and we will describe the specifics of each perijove pass such as the spacecraft orientation. Because of the challenges to predict the Points of Interest that will be in the JunoCam field of view we are now timing the image collection by latitude and/or executing campaigns.
There will still be a voting page for every orbit and we will describe the specifics of each perijove pass such as the spacecraft orientation. Because of the challenges to predict the Points of Interest that will be in the JunoCam field of view we are now timing the image collection by latitude and/or executing campaigns.
Target Selection
We will take polar images on every PJ pass to assemble
timelapse sequences to study the dynamics of the circumpolar cyclones. Between the north and south pole images will
be timed to get complete latitudinal coverage.
The rest of the resources will be used for campaigns. Options are to look for lightning, take multiple methane images to study high altitude hazes, study Jupiter’s ring, take stereo pairs for cloud altitudes, image Galilean moons when available, etc. We will keep the Voting Round discussion for comments on what would be best. We are hoping that you enjoy being a part of this process, that you enjoy being a member of the JunoCam team.
The rest of the resources will be used for campaigns. Options are to look for lightning, take multiple methane images to study high altitude hazes, study Jupiter’s ring, take stereo pairs for cloud altitudes, image Galilean moons when available, etc. We will keep the Voting Round discussion for comments on what would be best. We are hoping that you enjoy being a part of this process, that you enjoy being a member of the JunoCam team.
Voting Round :
PJ6 Encounter
CLOSED : 2017-05-11 17:00:00
Perijove on : 2017-05-19 06:00 UT
At PJ6 the orientation of the Juno spacecraft will be optimized for gravity studies, to understand more about the interior structure of Jupiter. That means that we will have radio contact with the spacecraft throughout the perijove pass. That in turn means that we will be able to downlink data the entire time, and we won't be limited by our onboard storage so severely.
Given this situation, we would like to increase the number of images in the polar timelapse sequence to study the intriguing motions of the storms around the poles. We will also be able to take just as many images on the pass across the midlatitudes and equator as we did on PJ5 - so we expect to be able to collect just as many images of Points of Interest that you vote on! Help us with that selection by weighing in on which sites you think are most important and, of course, voting.
Given this situation, we would like to increase the number of images in the polar timelapse sequence to study the intriguing motions of the storms around the poles. We will also be able to take just as many images on the pass across the midlatitudes and equator as we did on PJ5 - so we expect to be able to collect just as many images of Points of Interest that you vote on! Help us with that selection by weighing in on which sites you think are most important and, of course, voting.
We had 20 Points of interest to select from for the PJ6 swath.
We started the process of generating image commands as soon as the voting closed. We looked first at the predictions of what time an image would need to be taken to get a particular POI. We have constraints on how closely together we can take images, because an image must be moved from the camera to the spacecraft computer before we take the next one. That means if targets are closer together in time than 90 sec we combined them. We took the time that corresponded to the higher priority target, but we will get the other POI's in the image.
This time the POI’s were close enough together in latitude that we were able to get all of them! It also helped that the spacecraft will be in contact with the earth transmitting data throughout the flyby, so we had more data volume to work with on this pass.
The list of POI’s we will image in order of the votes they received is as follows, with the “+” indicating targets we combined:
A whirl of a pearl + String of Pearls
The darkest spot + A multi-colored band
little greenish place + Hotspot + Hotspot tail
The big red stripe
Scott polar cap
Gas Irregularity + Spot of Brahman
Carl Sagan’s jawbreaker + South tropical zone
Things seem quiet in the south + Southern FFRs
Southern edge of northern FFRs
Great polar spot
Cloud ripple
Belt-zone border
Maximus Spatium
These images will be available after we get "C kernels" which is a file with the spacecraft orientation as a function of time. This data is necessary for us to process the data before we put it on the website. It takes two days for us to get that data from the navigation team. Perijove 6 is on Friday, May 19, so we expect to start posting the images on Tuesday, May 23.
We started the process of generating image commands as soon as the voting closed. We looked first at the predictions of what time an image would need to be taken to get a particular POI. We have constraints on how closely together we can take images, because an image must be moved from the camera to the spacecraft computer before we take the next one. That means if targets are closer together in time than 90 sec we combined them. We took the time that corresponded to the higher priority target, but we will get the other POI's in the image.
This time the POI’s were close enough together in latitude that we were able to get all of them! It also helped that the spacecraft will be in contact with the earth transmitting data throughout the flyby, so we had more data volume to work with on this pass.
The list of POI’s we will image in order of the votes they received is as follows, with the “+” indicating targets we combined:
A whirl of a pearl + String of Pearls
The darkest spot + A multi-colored band
little greenish place + Hotspot + Hotspot tail
The big red stripe
Scott polar cap
Gas Irregularity + Spot of Brahman
Carl Sagan’s jawbreaker + South tropical zone
Things seem quiet in the south + Southern FFRs
Southern edge of northern FFRs
Great polar spot
Cloud ripple
Belt-zone border
Maximus Spatium
These images will be available after we get "C kernels" which is a file with the spacecraft orientation as a function of time. This data is necessary for us to process the data before we put it on the website. It takes two days for us to get that data from the navigation team. Perijove 6 is on Friday, May 19, so we expect to start posting the images on Tuesday, May 23.
Candidate Points of Interest
Voting has closed for this round. View results in the Candidates list below. Be sure to keep an eye on the Processing Gallery for images of POIs/Campaigns selected during this round of voting taken by the JunoCam!
map : 2020-06-15 UT
Cylindrical map generated from data submitted via the JunoCam Planning section.
Round Discussion
General discussion about this round.
11 Comments
Still a Whirl of Pearl :)
I am amazed that the turbulence trail and its transition to linear flow trailing the Great Red Spot is not a continuing point of interest. It appears that it is, in fact, corkscrewing a stable zone on a vast planetary scale; i.e. the influence of the GRS circles the entire planet at its latitude. This is, to me, unprecedented and amazing.
I would love to see the greenish place because I didn't know Jupiter even had the color green on it's surface.
That's cool! Have a safe flight and clear sky over there! Greetings!
Wonder why the dark diagonals aren't mirrored in the south?
... it's your voting for POIs 166, 539, 830, and/or 1182, which extends the north polar time lapse sequence, and POIs 1071, 1131, and/or 1183 for extending the south polar sequence. Thanks!
For PJ06, I'm most interested in extending the polar time lapse sequences further to the respective edge of the polar haze disks. By images from previous perijoves, I'm rather sure, that we can obtain information about the dynamics down to latitudes between 50 and 60 deg. PJ06 may be one of few opportunities to cover the dynamics of this large range of latitudes in a seamless way. The zones around edge of the haze disks are particularly turbulent. I'm expecting impressive image products. And a dense time-spacing, as dense as JunoCam allows, will show the edge of the haze from a number of viewing angles, offering the opportunity to obtain kind of a tomogram, which will tell more about the structure of the haze. I'm also hoping vor clues about the connection between FFRs, haze, the highly turbulent zone full of vortices around the haze disk, and Jupiter's differential rotation.
Some suggestions for voting:
For this perijove, I have not had time to prepare a predictive map, but Marco Vedovato’s map of April 19-20 gives a good idea of what is in that sector. There are no special local features here, but the following latitude bands seem of the greatest interest.
1. NEBs dark projection (‘hot spot’). [POI 341: “Little greenish place”, 6.8ºN; or, "Hot Spot"] There is a good chance that Juno will pass over one of these at PJ6 – although they are quite variable, and often disturbed by passing ‘rifts’. The Microwave Radiometer team are particularly hoping to catch one, and to get a JunoCam image of the same target, so it is very desirable to take this image; it would be the closest-ever image of a ‘hot spot’.
2. NEB. [POI 839: “Gas irregularity”, 17.7ºN; or, "Spot of Brahman" as Glenn suggests] This belt is still massively disturbed, and JunoCam can view an unusual pale sector. This seems to be an example of a general process, where large-scale disturbance has evolved to small-scale turbulence, so it would be a worthwhile target for JunoCam’s high resolution. The image will also give a wider-field view of any NEBs ‘hot spot’.
3. Dark vortices on the N2 jet (NNTB south edge). [POI 830: “Great polar spot”, 36.4ºN] Many dark spots (presumably vortices) have arisen on this jet, which may be recovering from suppression during last year’s great NTBs jet outbreak. There will be a good chance of catching one. The image would also cover the revived NTB as it continues to mature.
4,5. North and south polar regions. [POI 166: “Scott polar cap”, 64.8ºN; & POI 1131: “Things seem quiet in the south”, 63.5ºS].
--John Rogers
Spot of Brahman is in a latitude region where we appear to be seeing mesoscale waves that only the highest resolution imaging can detect, e.g. Hubble Space Telescope imaging with WFC3. They aren't at all longitudes, but it would be scientifically extremely useful to get the closest close-up of this region. They don't cover all longitudes, so this is not guaranteed, but we're seeing them in the last few months in Juno-supporting observations and haven't for many years. So we don't know why they are appearing now.