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Distant NASA spacecraft snaps stunning images of Jupiter and its moons

LeisurePublished: 2025-04-28 04:21:05
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NASA's Juno spacecraft has zipped around the gas giant Jupiter dozens of times.

On its recent 39th orbit, the spacecraft captured fascinating footage of the planet's swirling clouds and two of its large moons: the intensely volcanic Io and ice-blanketed Europa. You can spot the two moons to the right of Jupiter in the zoomed-in footage below.

Jupiter and its two large moons Io and EuropaNASA's Juno spacecraft captures Jupiter with two of its large moons, Io (on left) and Europa (on right). Credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech / SwRI / MSSS / Image processing by AndreaLuck CC BY­­ SEE ALSO: A speeding object collided with Jupiter and blew up, cool space footage shows

Juno captured these images from 38,000 miles above Jupiter's clouds (for reference, the International Space Station orbits some 250 miles above Earth.) In September 2022, Juno will swing relatively close by Europa, making the "closest fly-by of the enigmatic moon in decades," notes NASA.

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In the coming years, we'll learn considerably more about this intriguing Jovian satellite. In 2024, NASA will launch the much-anticipated Europa Clipper spacecraft to Jupiter, where the probe will repeatedly sweep close to the moon.

"NASA's Europa Clipper will conduct detailed reconnaissance of Jupiter's moon Europa and investigate whether the icy moon could harbor conditions suitable for life," says NASA.

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