Voting Round :

PJ12 Encounter

CLOSED : 2018-04-01 00:00:00
Perijove on : 2018-04-01 09:47 UT
About This Round
As Juno's orbit evolves we are spending more time on the night side of Jupiter, and perijove is moving closer to the subsolar point. The orbit is also rotating such that the closest approach point is moving northward. In order to take advantage of good lighting while we can the project agreed to re-orient the Juno spacecraft for this pass. We will not be voting this pass - go to winner selection to read how the images will be taken.
Winner Selection
We will start inbound imaging 19 hours before the closest approach. These distant images are at a high phase angle but will give us context for later images.

About 2 hours from closest approach we will image Io. We are planning to take two pictures - one exposed nominally and one that over-exposes Io to look for volcanic plumes extending above the surface.

For the 2 hours between our best view looking down at the north pole and looking up at the south pole JunoCam will carry out several campaigns.

Timelapse sequences of images of the north pole and the south pole will allow us to generate movies showing the motions of the circumpolar cyclones.

The Great Red Spot (GRS) is close to Juno's ground track. We will image the region just east of the GRS when we are close. As the spacecraft recedes from Jupiter and our field of view covers more territory we will capture the Great Red Spot in its entirety.

Towards the end of the perijove pass we will image Ganymede. Update: We missed Ganymede, but Io is in this image.
Voting has closed for this round. Winners are still being selected by the Mission Juno Team. Please Check back soon!

Round Discussion

General discussion about this round.

3 Comments

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  1. comment by Candy on 2018-04-14 02:14 UT
    JUNO SPECIALIST

    Hi Brian,

    Unfortunately full-spin images take a lot of data volume, so the only time we use them is when we are imaging the satellites. The TDI is selected based on the best integration time for the moons.

  2. comment by BrianSwift on 2018-03-29 17:07 UT

    I can never have enough images that are full spin TDI 4 low compression far away from Jupiter preferably with a bright point source (star/pixel-sized-moon) that appears in the first and last frames.

  3. comment by Tournefort-29 on 2018-03-27 14:13 UT

    Dear NASA; Juno Mission; MSSS; may I join the Campaigns and initiate a parallel Campaign related with the Tool Concept I am working on? How many of the citizen scientists think that we should have a micro-observation window camera and a calibration tool-experiment next to it when we explore extraterrestrial space objects from orbit and on the surface? The concept tool is approximately suitable for both purposes. Here is a 'sneak peak' from the conceptual image. I will present more as soon are ready.