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By July 4, Jupiter's probe Juno had been orbiting Jupiter for a full year, orbiting about 114.5 million kilometers.
announced on NASA's official website that Juno will fly over Jupiter's most distinctive red spot on the 10th of this month.
1830, scientists monitored the Great Red Spot as a giant storm with a diameter of 16,000 kilometers, and the fly-off will be a remarkable close-up look at the Great Red Spot. Scott Bolton, lead researcher on the
Juno mission, said: "The mysterious Great Red Spot is probably Jupiter's most famous feature, a huge storm that has raged on the solar system's largest planet for centuries, and now Juno and the scientific instruments it carries that penetrate clouds will provide insight into the origin of the storm and help us understand how it moved and why it was so special."
" data collection of the Great Red Spot was part of Juno's sixth mission to fly over Jupiter's mysterious cloud top.
the exact time its orbit is closest to the center of the Great Red Spot is 9:55 p.m. EST, when Juno will appear about 3,500 kilometers above Jupiter.
next, it will fly 9,000 kilometers above the Great Red Spot Cloud, during which time its load of eight scientific instruments and one imaging device will continue to operate.
"The Jupiter mission has been a testament to the team's creativity and technical capabilities, and every time we reach a new orbit, we get closer to the core of Jupiter's radiation belt," said Rick Nebaken, project manager for Juno, NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
so far, Juno has weathered the e-storm and is doing better than we thought.
" (Lin Lin Lin)