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NASA Says It Is Sailing 'Full-Steam Ahead In Solar System Exploration'
NASA Says It Is Sailing 'Full-Steam Ahead In Solar System Exploration'
Nov 16, 2024 7:48 PM

NASA said it is sailing full-steam ahead in solar system exploration.

(NASA/JPL)

At a Glance

NASA said it's moving forward with missions targeted at exploring our solar system.Many current and future missions will help answer fundamental questions about our existence, NASA says.

As NASA prepares to take Juno's first close-up images of Jupiter on Aug. 27, the space agency announced Friday that it is "sailing full-steam ahead in solar system investigation," and hopes current and future missions will help about "how we came to be, where we are going and whether we are alone in the universe."“Juno is the latest example of the extraordinary science we have to look forward to right in our own solar system,” said NASA Planetary Division Director Jim Green in a NASA press release. “There are many uncharted, promising worlds and objects we are eager to explore with our current and future missions.”

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NASA said the James Webb Space Telescope, set to launch in 2018, is a powerful telescope that will allow astrophysicists to not only observe faint objects across the universe but also observe in greater detail all of the planets and their moons within our solar system.

"Webb’s angular and spectral resolution will allow us to observe these targets with unprecedented sensitivity and even follow geologic activity," NASA said in its release.

Juno and Beyond

With Juno exploring Jupiter, NASA's curiosity has been piqued about its largest moons, including Io.

in the solar system, and NASA believes research may provide some answers to its plethora of unanswered questions. NASA has also designated nine science instruments for a future mission to investigate whether Europa, which is believed to have a liquid ocean beneath its icy surface, is home to habitable environments.

With upgraded instruments on Hubble, the telescope has captured images of Jupiter’s auroras and discovered evidence of saltwater on Jupiter’s largest moon, Ganymede. The mission will continue another five years.

Saturn continues to be explored by NASA’s Cassini spacecraft, which began its mission in 2004 and will culminate in 2017, and NASA plans a set of orbits, known as the Grand Finale. The spacecraft will complete 22 dives through the narrow gap between Saturn's outer atmosphere and its rings to offer new views and scientific insights, said NASA.

Cassini will be replaced by Webb in 2017, with plans to continue its exploration of one of Saturn's major satellites, Titan, which has a rich atmosphere and surface chemistry.

Noting the one-year anniversary of the July 14, 2015, and its moon, Charon, NASA said the mission has been extended to "study an object in the Kuiper belt, an icy field of early building blocks of the solar system packed with primordial organics."

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Other current and upcoming missions include Juno, the and the Dawn mission to the will continue and in September, NASA will launch OSIRIS-REx (Origins, Spectral Interpretation, Resource Identification, Security-Regolith Explorer), the first U.S. mission to a near-Earth asteroid (Bennu) to collect a sample for return to Earth in 2023. NASA said OSIRIS-REx will help "unlock secrets of the history of our solar system, and shed light on how life may have come to be on our planet."

“We are fortunate to live during a time when grand scientific quests are possible, and in a country that values curiosity and discovery as inherently noble pursuits,” says Paul Hertz, Astrophysics Division Director at NASA Headquarters in Washington.

MORE ON WEATHER.COM:Jupiter Encounter: 10 Things You Need to Know About the Juno Mission

Juno's mission is to get a glimpse of the of Jupiter's surface through the planet's cloud-socked atmosphere and map the interior from a unique vantage point above the poles. Some questions NASA hopes to answer: How much water exists? Is there a solid core? Why are Jupiter's southern and northern lights the brightest in the solar system?

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