Prøve GULL - Gratis
A Planet Revealed
Scientific American
|September 2025
The Juno spacecraft has rewritten the story of Jupiter, the solar system's undisputed heavyweight
THE NASA SPACECRAFT tasked with uncovering the secrets of Jupiter, king of the planets, is running out of time. The Juno probe has already survived far longer than anticipated—its path around the solar system's largest planet has repeatedly flown it through a tempest of radiation that should have corroded away its instruments and electronics long ago. And yet here it is: one of the greatest planetary detectives ever built, still pirouetting around Jupiter, fully functional.
But it may not be for long. September 2025 marks the end of Juno's extended mission. Although it could get another reprieve—an extended-extended mission—the spacecraft cannot carry on forever. Eventually the probe is fated to plunge into Jupiter's stormy skies, to lethal effect. Regardless of when that happens, the spacecraft's legacy is indelible.
It revealed a whole different Jupiter than scientists thought they knew. Oddly geometric continent-size storms, in strange yet stable configurations, dance around its poles. Its heaviest matter seems to linger in its skies, while its abyssal heart is surprisingly light and fuzzy. Its innards don't resemble the lasagnalike layers found in rocky worlds; they look more like mingling swirls of different kinds of ink.
And Juno wasn't simply trying to understand Jupiter. It set out to uncover how the entire solar system was born. Jupiter, after all, was the first planet to piece itself together after the sun exploded into existence. Hidden underneath the planet's cloud tops, there is a recording of the beginnings of everything we see around us. “That's the story behind why Juno was created: to go and look inside Jupiter every way we knew how, to try to figure out what happened in the early solar system that formed that planet—and what role that planet had in forming us,” says Scott Bolton, the mission's principal investigator at the Southwest Research Institute in San Antonio, Tex.
Denne historien er fra September 2025-utgaven av Scientific American.
Abonner på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av kuraterte premiumhistorier og over 9000 magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
FLERE HISTORIER FRA Scientific American
Scientific American
METEORITE HEIST
Violence, lies and the smuggling of the ninth-largest meteorite in the world
13 mins
November 2025
Scientific American
Workouts Help to Treat Cancer
Exercise improves survival, limits recurrence, and can be used with surgery and drugs
3 mins
November 2025
Scientific American
LIFE'S BIG BANGS
Controversial evidence hints that complex life might have emerged hundreds of millions of years earlier than previously thought—and possibly more than once
17 mins
November 2025
Scientific American
Canyon Wonderland
An underwater robot documents the strange denizens of Mar del Plata Canyon
2 mins
November 2025
Scientific American
The Math Trick Hiding in Credit Card Numbers
This simple algorithm from the 1960s catches your typos
4 mins
November 2025
Scientific American
50, 100 & 150 Years
\"A comprehensive study by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory vigorously urges that a $1-billion program be launched to develop a new automobile engine for introduction by 1985 or sooner.
3 mins
November 2025
Scientific American
Grippy Super Team
Ants form complex chains to carry more than 100 times each ant's weight
2 mins
November 2025
Scientific American
Human on a Bicycle
Revisiting a classic graphic on the efficiency of motion
1 min
November 2025
Scientific American
Risky Genes
As genetic risk scores get integrated into clinical care, experts expect patients to gain earlier access to therapies and enjoy better outcomes
9 mins
November 2025
Scientific American
Gut Virome
Your digestive tract is crawling with viruses— and that's a good thing
2 mins
November 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size
