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What Lies Inside Jupiter?
http://science.nasa.gov/science-news/sc ... jul_juno2/

Some time ago, when I was into astral travel, I went to Jupiter, just one of my several cosmic journeys.
The outstanding feature was a great bubble of water - a veritable ocean that must have been much bigger than the Earth, floating in a denser gas.
It would be interesting to see if the probe finds it as I did?
 
Amateur astronomers capture explosion on Jupiter. Article has picture.

http://news.nationalgeographic.com/...s/News_Main+(National+Geographic+News+-+Main)

Early Monday morning U.S. amateur astronomers spotted a bright light squiggling across the upper cloud deck of Jupiter. Both assumed they'd witnessed a large meteor or comet impact, and so far, professional astronomers seem to agree.

NASA's Amy Simon Miller, though, cautioned that, "at this point, we can only confirm based on the fact that there were two independent reports." Official observations will have to wait.

Such a strike would be the fourth impact seen on Jupiter in just the last three years. And the fact that the explosion was visible via backyard telescopes more than 454 million miles (730 million kilometers) away—indicates it was probably a significant event.

"Although we don't yet know the size or exact nature of the impactor, based on the flash brightness we expect it is slightly bigger and energetic than the one seen in 2010, which was estimated to be on the order of 10 meters [33 feet] in size," said Miller, chief of the planetary systems laboratory at Goddard Spaceflight Center in Maryland. "By contrast, the impactor in 2009 was likely 200 to 500 meters [660 to 1,600 feet]."

(See "Bright Fireball Slams Into Jupiter" [June 2010] and "Jupiter Impact Creates Huge New Spot" [July 2009].)

Leaving a Mark on Jupiter?

Amateur astronomer Dan Peterson, in Racine, Wisconsin, watched the Jupiter impact live while peering through a 12-inch telescope. Later, his counterpart to the south—George Hall of Dallas, Texas—realized he'd accidentally caught the flash on video, thanks to a webcam-telescope link. (Watch the video of Monday's Jupiter impact.)

"My best guess is that it was a small undetected comet that is now history," wrote Peterson on a telescope message board post titled "I observed an explosion on Jupiter this morning!"

"Hopefully," he added, "it will sign its name on Jupiter's cloud tops."

Searching for that signature—dark markings on Jupiter's cloud tops—is exactly what astronomers should do next, NASA's Miller said. "An impact superheats the immediate atmosphere and will essentially produce soot," she said.

Only if such stains are spotted will heavy-duty telescopes be enlisted to confirm the Jupiter blast, she said. "Professional telescopes and Hubble are typically very oversubscribed and won't be called into action unless a debris field is confirmed first by amateurs."

(Related: "Third Jupiter Fireball Spotted—Sky-Watching Army Needed.")

Jupiter Impacts "Probably Quite Frequent"

Before the recent rash of Jovian collisions, it was thought that Jupiter impacts were rare cosmic events—with the 1994 death of comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 a spectacular exception. That impactor consisted of at least 21 fragments, some as wide as 1.3 miles (2 kilometers), according to NASA.

Now astronomers have begun to think the impacts are in fact fairly common.

On Jupiter "very small events are probably quite frequent," Miller said, though many would occur on the half of the planet we can't see. "In fact, they probably happen up to once a week, but some would be too small to even make a flash."

With more tech-savvy amateurs like Peterson and Hall monitoring Jupiter on a regular basis, she said, scientists hope to get a better grip on the number of meteors floating in Jupiter's vicinity—one grainy video at a time.

"The impacts in 2009 and then 2010 showed that there were very many smaller objects out near Jupiter with the potential to impact," Miller said.

"At that point we expected that many more sightings would occur," she added, "so this new one confirms our hypothesis."
 
An icy moon with hidden oceans would of course require an underwater probe, but what about gas giants with no solid surface to land on or water to swim in? A team of NASA JPL scientists believes the answer lies in robots that can float in the atmosphere for extended periods of time, without depending on wings, motors or hot air balloons. The scientists call them "windbots," machines that can harness the power of the wind on Jupiter and the other gas giants, since it's not ideal to send solar- or nuclear-powered robots to the outer planets.

The researchers want to design robots that can be powered by turbulence, in particular, which they describe as "wind that's frequently changing direction and intensity." Lead researcher Adrian Stoica says that's similar similar to how some wristwatches can be wound by shaking them. Stoica and his team were recently awarded $100,000 by NASA's Innovative Advanced Concepts (NIAC) program, and they plan to use that money to create a model for testing. If they manage to conjure up a model that works, windbots can also be used here on Earth in the future to monitor turbulent weather conditions like hurricanes.

NASA
Source: http://www.engadget.com/2015/07/23/nasa-windbot-jupiter/
 
Sounds like Jupiter might be a teenager.
 
Astronomers probe below Jupiter's cloud tops
By Jonathan Amos BBC Science Correspondent

US astronomers have managed to peer deep into the atmosphere of Jupiter using a radio telescope on Earth.
The Very Large Array (VLA) traced the presence of ammonia in the gas giant to study the circulation systems below the visible cloud tops.

For features such as the planet's Great Red Spot - a huge storm that has raged for at least 400 years - the scientists can see something of its roots.
The observations go many tens of kilometres into the atmosphere.

"What really excites me is just the level of detail we see," said team-member Michael Wong from the University of California, Berkeley.
"In our maps you can see different zones, turbulent features, vortices - even the Great Red Spot.
"This has all been made possible by an upgrade to the VLA and a new technique developed by one of our co-workers," he told BBC News.

The Karl G Jansky Very Large Array is based in the desert of New Mexico, close to the town of Socorro.
As its name suggests, it is multi-antenna telescope.
The upgrade Dr Wong is referring to has made the facility a far more sensitive tool for studying the radio emissions coming from objects in space.

And the new technique he mentions counters the smearing effect you would ordinarily expect to get if you took a long exposure of a rapidly rotating body (Jupiter's "day" lasts just 10 hours).
The result is a wonderfully detailed impression of what is happening under the immediate surface of the many-banded weather systems that race across the top of planet's atmosphere.

The team looks at the glow of ammonia because it is a tracer for the dynamical flow in the planet's gases, which are dominated by hydrogen and helium. At Earth, you might do something similar by using water as the tracer.
"We see the actual glow of the ammonia itself, and the variation in depth is correlated with brightness," explained Dr Wong.
"The deepest we can see in this dataset is about 12 Bar - 12 times the Earth's atmospheric pressure."

Plumes of ammonia are observed to rise up in waves. The team writes in the journal Science that the ammonia in these plumes will eventually condense out at higher altitudes, and could explain the ammonia ice clouds detected by the Galileo spacecraft in the 1990s.

"All told, there is a wealth of information about the structure of Jupiter's atmosphere in these new VLA images," said Imke de Pater, the lead author on the Science paper.
"We hope to resolve a number of outstanding questions with these and future studies using similar techniques." Prof de Pater wants to try similar observations at the gas giants Saturn and Uranus.

The research is a nice prelude to the next probe set to visit Jupiter: the US space agency satellite Juno arrives at the enormous planet on 4 July.
Its remote sensing instruments aim to characterise the full internal structure of the planet, right down to its rocky core - if indeed it has one.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-36439691
 
Astronomers probe below Jupiter's cloud tops
By Jonathan Amos BBC Science Correspondent

US astronomers have managed to peer deep into the atmosphere of Jupiter using a radio telescope on Earth.
The Very Large Array (VLA) traced the presence of ammonia in the gas giant to study the circulation systems below the visible cloud tops.
...

The research is a nice prelude to the next probe set to visit Jupiter: the US space agency satellite Juno arrives at the enormous planet on 4 July.
Its remote sensing instruments aim to characterise the full internal structure of the planet, right down to its rocky core - if indeed it has one.


http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-36439691

Something night owls can try to follow on the Internet tonight:
Juno mission: Jupiter probe on course for orbit manoeuvre
By Jonathan Amos BBC Science Correspondent, Pasadena

The US space agency (Nasa) says its Juno probe is on course to go into orbit around the Planet Jupiter.
The satellite is described as healthy and ready for what scientists concede will be a risky manoeuvre.

Juno has to execute a precise rocket firing to slow itself sufficiently to get captured by the giant world's gravity.
If it succeeds, researchers should get their best ever view of what lies beneath Jupiter's stormy clouds.

The 35-minute orbit insertion burn - timed to to start at 03:18 GMT (04:18 BST) on Tuesday - is sure to jangle the nerves of everyone here in mission control at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in California.
If the engine fails to fire at the right time or for an insufficient period, this $1.1bn (£800m) venture will simply fly straight past Jupiter and into the oblivion of deep space. :eek:
Juno will not have its main dish pointed at Earth during the braking procedure, so the mission team will have to follow events via a series of simple tones sent back through the probe's low-gain antenna.

Rick Nybakken, Juno's project manager, said the probe had to thread itself on to a very accurate trajectory to achieve its goal.
"What we're targeting is a space that's tens of km wide. We're going to hit that within 1.2 seconds after a journey of [2.8 billion km]. That tells you just how good our navigation team is," he told reporters. :)
"We need to get into orbit tonight and I'm very confident we will."

The scientists must sit on their hands, though. The event is so far away, radio messages take 48 minutes to cross the vastness of space. Juno has to do everything on its own.

etc...

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-36700048

Pics, videos, diagrams on page.

There will be updates on Juno's orbit insertion across BBC News, and the BBC Sky At Night programme will run a special programme dedicated to the mission on Sunday 10 July at 20:30 BST, on BBC Four.

Fingers and everything crossed!
 
I'm sure earlier versions of this page said that Juno would reach Jupiter by Independence Day, 4th July, but in fact it won't be put in orbit until tomorrow, the 5th.

Also it was said that the crucial retro-rocket is British built - if so, let's hope it works according to plan!

But perhaps the Beeb has screwed up its reporting, for once.
 
Juno probe enters into orbit around Jupiter
By Jonathan Amos BBC Science Correspondent, Pasadena

The US space agency has successfully put a new probe in orbit around Jupiter.
The Juno satellite, which left Earth five years ago, had to fire a rocket engine to slow its approach to the planet and get caught by its gravity.
A sequence of tones transmitted from the spacecraft confirmed the braking manoeuvre had gone as planned.

Receipt of the radio messages prompted wild cheering at Nasa's mission control in Pasadena, California.
"All stations on Juno co-ord, we have the tone for burn cut-off on Delta B," Juno Mission Control had announced. "Roger Juno, welcome to Jupiter." :D

Scientists plan to use the spacecraft to sense the planet's deep interior. They think the structure and the chemistry of its insides hold clues to how this giant world formed some four-and-a-half-billion years ago.

Engineers had warned in advance that the engine firing was fraught with danger.
No previous spacecraft has dared pass so close to Jupiter; its intense radiation belts can destroy unprotected electronics.
One calculation even suggested the orbit insertion would have subjected Juno to a dose equivalent to a million dental X-rays.
But the probe is built like a tank with titanium shielding, and the 35-minute rocket burn appeared to go without a hitch.
While the radiation dangers have not gone away, the probe should now be able to prepare its instruments to start sensing what lies beneath Jupiter's opaque clouds.

Tuesday's orbit insertion has put Juno in a large ellipse around the planet that takes just over 53 days to complete.
A second burn of the rocket engine in mid-October will tighten this orbit to just 14 days. It is then that the science can really start.
This will involve repeat passes just a few thousand kilometres above the cloudtops.
At each close approach, Juno will use its eight remote sensing instruments - plus its camera - to peer down through the gas planet's many layers, to measure their composition, temperature, motion and other properties.

A priority will be to determine the abundance of oxygen at Jupiter. This will be bound up in its water.
"How much water Jupiter has tells us a lot about where the planet formed early in the Solar System," explained team-member Candy Hansen.
"We think that Jupiter may not have formed where it is today, and if it formed further away or closer in - that tells us a lot about how the Solar System in general formed. Because when we look at planets around other stars we see quite a menagerie of possibilities."
...

Nasa plans to run Juno through to February 2018, assuming any radiation damage has not made it inoperable by then. The performance of the camera, for example, is expected to degrade rapidly within a few months.
In line with the practice on many previous planetary missions, the probe will be commanded to end its days by ditching into the atmosphere of Jupiter.
This ensures there is no possibility of Juno crashing into and contaminating the gas giant's large moons, at least one of which, Europa, is considered to have the potential to host microbial life.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-36710768

Relive the drama of Juno's orbit insertion in a BBC Sky At Night special this coming Sunday, 10 July, at 20:30 BST, on BBC Four.
 
A story from a few days ago:
Juno mission: British rocket engine ready for Jupiter task
By Jonathan Amos BBC Science Correspondent, Pasadena
2 July 2016

When the US space agency's latest probe to Jupiter tries to enter into orbit around the planet on Tuesday, it will be relying on a British rocket engine.
The Juno satellite is rapidly bearing down on the gas giant after a five-year journey from Earth.
It must slow itself to get captured by the gravity of the giant world.

This all-or-nothing job will be performed by its Leros-1b engine built by Moog-ISP in Westcott, Buckinghamshire.
"It's a tremendous thing for us," said Moog's chief engineer, Dr Ian Coxhill.
"The engine has to work for Juno to get into orbit; it has to burn at a precise time and burn for a continuous duration of at least 20 mins.
"There'll be some frayed nerves, for sure."

The Leros-1b was chosen to be the main engine on the Nasa satellite by its manufacturer, Lockheed Martin.
Previous American space agency missions have also used the Westcott technology, including the Messenger probe that went into orbit around Mercury in 2011. So, there is high confidence this latest engine will be up to the task.

Indeed, Juno has already fired it during the epic journey to Jupiter.
Back in 2012, the Leros had to operate reliably twice to refine the trajectory of the spacecraft, and on each occasion the engine burned flawlessly for more than 20 minutes.

"In fact, things went so well that Lockheed Martin said initially they thought they had confused the real flight data on the engine burn with the simulation data. It was that accurate. So that's obviously really encouraging," Dr Coxhill told BBC News.

The Jupiter Orbit Insertion manoeuvre will be conducted in the early hours of Tuesday morning, British time.
Juno will turn and fire the Leros in the forward direction to try to remove about 500m/s from its velocity - enough so that it goes into a 53-day orbit around the gas giant.
No burn or a burn of insufficient length would send Juno into the oblivion of deep space.

The probe will send back a series of tones to update Nasa and Lockheed Martin engineers on the progress of the insertion.
The Leros should light at 04:18 BST (03:18 GMT) and terminate at 4:53 BST (03:53 GMT), for a full firing of 35 minutes in length.
These are what are called Earth-receive times, when the confirmation tones are picked up by Nasa's antenna network.
In reality, they will be listening 48 minutes in arrears because of the vast distance - 849 million km - the radio signals will have had to travel from Jupiter.
And this means of course that the whole event is actually reported at Earth after it is all over.

Juno will therefore have to rely on its automated systems to troubleshoot any problems that might arise during the firing.
"The system is designed so that if, for instance, the radiation at Jupiter causes the computer to re-set and the engine to stop… it will do a quick recycle and restart the burn. We expect to get all the way to 35 minutes," said Rick Nybakken, Nasa's project manager on Juno.

Another burn in October will tighten the initial orbit to one of two weeks from which the spacecraft can then conduct its science observations.
No probe has ever got as close to Jupiter as this mission will go.
...

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-36695270

Good news for British engineering.

(Good news for Britain too, after Obama's comments about Brexit putting Britain "at the back of the queue" for trade talks.


http://www.theguardian.com/politics/2016/apr/22/barack-obama-brexit-uk-back-of-queue-for-trade-talks

The Prez might need to rethink that, after Leros helped put Juno into orbit around Jupiter! :twisted: )
 
Thinking back to the early days of the space program when aborted countdowns, explosions on the pad, and hardware failures were the norm. Now, astonishing feats like Juno seem almost routine. How far we have come!
 
They've got a big one of those in Falmouth's National Maritime Museum; I think it is supposed to demonstrate atmospheric banding on Earth, but it is a bit too homogenous nowadays to demonstrate anything very clearly.
family-on-wind-globe.jpg
 
They've got a big one of those in Falmouth's National Maritime Museum; I think it is supposed to demonstrate atmospheric banding on Earth, but it is a bit too homogenous nowadays to demonstrate anything very clearly.
Perhaps you caught it on a bad day. When I was involved there it seemed OK.

But that was a few years ago now, so perhaps it is clapped out!
 
Juno probe returns first in-orbit Jupiter photo
By Jonathan Amos BBC Science Correspondent

The American space agency's new Juno mission to Jupiter has returned its first imagery since going into orbit around the gas giant last week.
The picture shows a sunlit portion of the planet, together with three of its big moons - Io, Europa and Ganymede.
The fourth major satellite - Callisto - is out of view.

Juno is currently moving away from Jupiter on a large arc, but will sweep back in during August, enabling its "JunoCam" to take even better images.
At the moment, scientists are just relieved to know that the equipment is in good health after its encounter with Jupiter's harsh radiation environment during the spacecraft's orbit insertion manoeuvre on 5 July (GMT).

The mission team is now turning on all the probe's instruments to check their status.
A period of calibration lies ahead before the serious business of studying Jupiter begins in October.
It should be mid-way through that month that a further engine burn puts the spacecraft in a tight, 14-day orbit around the planet.
There will then follow a good 30-plus revolutions of the massive world, with many passes getting under 5,000km from its cloud tops.

The image on this page was acquired on Sunday, when Juno was some 4.3 million km from Jupiter.

etc...

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-36780756
 
Jupiter's Great Red Spot 'roars with heat'
By Jonathan WebbScience reporter, BBC News
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_90531181_r3700013-jupiter_two_moons-spl.jpg
Image copyrightNASA/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY
Image captionThe huge storm, seen here by Voyager 1 in 1979, apparently creates a high-altitude hotspot
Jupiter's Great Red Spot - a hurricane three times bigger than Earth - is blasting the planet's upper atmosphere with heat, astronomers have found.

Using measurements from an infrared telescope in Hawaii, a UK and US team found evidence for temperatures as high as 1,500C - hundreds of degrees warmer than anywhere else on the planet.

They suggest the hotspot is created by thunderous soundwaves "breaking" in the thin upper reaches of the atmosphere.

The research is published in Nature.

It arguably solves what planetary scientists had dubbed an "energy crisis" for gas giants like Jupiter: temperatures in their upper atmospheres soar much higher than can be explained by solar energy - especially given their vast distances from the Sun.

If the mysterious heat were generated by local sources, like Jupiter's famous storm, then the conundrum would be solved - and these measurements are the first direct evidence of any such activity.

Study co-author Dr Tom Stallard, from the University of Leicester, said this was a major step forward in a "20-30 year odyssey" to try and understand heat flow on Jupiter.

"Ever since Voyager, we've had measurements of the temperature at the top of Jupiter's atmosphere, and it's been hot across the whole globe - from the poles, all the way to the equator," he told the BBC.

_90531746_image-21.png
Image copyrightJ O’DONOGHUE/NASA IRTF
Image captionHeat above the Great Red spot appears as a pale smudge, south of Jupiter's equator
Jupiter's enormous, dramatic aurora can explain the heat in the polar regions, but for that warmth to reach the equator would require incredibly dramatic mixing, which modelling studies haven't been able to support.

"There's no real excuse for it to be so hot," said Dr James O'Donoghue from Boston University, the paper's first author.

Sound and fury
The freshly discovered spike in temperature, detected using a spectrometer at the Nasa Infrared Telescope Facility (IRTF) in Mauna Kea, Hawaii, offers a solution.

Several hundred km directly above the clouds of the Great Red Spot, the hotspot suggests that high-altitude heat is somehow created by the turmoil beneath.

"Several people have argued that it's likely that the heat comes from below, but the observations have never backed them up," Dr Stallard said.

He and his colleagues don't know exactly what is causing the heat, but they have some ideas. It could be driven by devastating Jovian thunderclaps, rumbling upwards from the churning red clouds of the Solar System's biggest storm.

_90531742_image-12.png
Image copyright.
Image captionAcoustic waves may be creating the heat
"You get some kind of acoustic event, probably thunder or something like that - or possibly other forms of sound energy - and that propagates directly upwards," Dr Stallard explained.

"That wave will continue going upwards until it reaches a lower-density region at the top of the atmosphere, and then it breaks and deposits all that wave energy into the top of the atmosphere, just like waves break on the shore - as the water gets thinner, it's less able to carry that wave and so it breaks and you see lots of energy."

There is a precedent for such sound-driven warming much closer to home, according to Dr O'Donoghue.

"There is some evidence in Earth's atmosphere, above storms and above features such as mountains - the Andes mountains in fact - that there are acoustic waves emanating from them, and that they propagate up into the atmosphere and cause heating there," he said.

Ionic thermometer
The key to revealing the temperature spike was a tiny ion: H3+, or protonated hydrogen. It is incredibly reactive and usually short-lived, but in the sparse fringe of Jupiter's outer atmosphere there is almost nothing else for it to react with.

Crucially, this ion works like a glowing, long-range thermometer for scientists, if they have the right sort of telescope - such as the spectrometer at the IRTF, which gathered the relevant data in a single nine-hour window back in 2012.

"Just by measuring its light, you can find out the temperature wherever it is," said Dr O'Donoghue. "And it's throughout all of the gas giant upper atmospheres - so it's essentially an in situ temperature probe."

_90531179_hotspot_cover_1280.jpg
Image copyrightNASA/JPL/SPACE SCIENCE INSTITUTE
Image captionAt three Earth diameters across, the Great Red Spot is the biggest storm in the Solar System
Further insights might come from Nasa's Juno spacecraft, now in orbit around Jupiter after its five-year trek.

Dr Stallard said that telescopes around the world were trained on the gas giant to take parallel measurements - and his team had planned their observations with the mission in mind.

"We thought, this is something that we haven't addressed, and it needed addressing. We've really ramped up our studies away from the aurora.

"Juno's going to reveal magnificent levels of detail about... what the aurora are and how they're generated. But it will be interesting to see how much it tells us about the non-auroral regions and the top of the atmosphere.

"Obviously it's been designed to look deep, and to look at the aurora at the poles, but potentially Juno could reveal a lot more."

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-36904456
 
Last I heard Juno was heading back to Jupiter after going into orbit.
 
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Jupiter gravity push sets up 'meteor storm' on Earth
By Pallab GhoshScience correspondent, BBC News
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_90610712_99f63b02-f01d-4df3-9c04-5ac9df1485d3.jpg
Image copyrightSCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY
Image captionHundreds of shooting meteors could be streaking across the sky each hour
Observers are looking forward to an annual event that's expected to turn into a "meteor storm" on Friday morning.

The Perseid shower occurs every August but this year scientists say a gravitational push by Jupiter will make it more intense.

Some researchers are predicting up to 200 meteors per hour in the night sky at the shower's peak.

The best time to view the event in the UK will be the early hours of Friday.

The Perseid meteor shower is caused by a trail of debris from a comet called Swift-Tuttle which orbits the Sun.

Every year between July and August, the Earth drifts into the comet's trail and is peppered with meteors which burn up as they hit the atmosphere, disappearing in streaks of light.

These meteors are called the Perseids, because they appear to be coming from the constellation, Perseus.

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Media captionHow to watch the Perseid meteor shower
But this year will be unusual according to Dr Robert Massey of the Royal Astronomical Society.

"The Earth will move through a particularly distinct bit of debris a day early and this clump of material has been nudged by Jupiter's gravity.

"A rich stream of material is going to move into the path of the Earth as a result, and so Thursday night into Friday we should see a real enhancement of meteors.

"You might perhaps get to see hundreds a day and that will be something to look forward to."

Normally people viewing from a dark area, away from lights can see between 60 to 100 meteors an hour at the shower's peak.

The US space agency Nasa believes that could double this year.

"Forecasters are predicting a Perseid outburst this year with double normal rates on the night of August 11-12," said Bill Cooke with Nasa's meteoroid environments office.

"Under perfect conditions, rates could soar to 200 meteors per hour."

In towns and cities in the UK, expectation might be a bit more modest. Observers can normally expect to see between 15 and 25 meteors each hour but on this occasion it is likely to be even more spectacular, according to Tom Kerss who is an astronomer at the Royal Observatory Greenwich.

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Media captionBBC Weather presenter Tomasz Schafernaker tells us where and when to see the shower
"This year we could expect to see at least a 30 to 50% increase across the peak in the next couple of nights which means that those numbers will rise to over 30 to perhaps 40 meteors each hour for people living in urban environments and for people living in the countryside, where the sky is really dark, that could easily exceed 120 perhaps even 150 meteors an hour."

Some scientists are cautiously predicting an even a sharper bust of activity which could result in hundreds of meteors each hour just before sunrise.

"That would be something akin to what we would call a meteor storm," said Mr Kerss.

"We are a little uncertain as to whether that is going to be accurate - even the scientists who made the predictions are cautioning us that the data is not conclusive - but it certainly makes it worth going out and looking for it - because we could be in for a real treat."

Follow Pallab on Twitter

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-37050631
 
Update on the Juno Mission
NASA's Juno to Soar Closest to Jupiter This Saturday
juno20160825-16.jpg

This dual view of Jupiter was taken on August 23, when NASA's Juno spacecraft was 2.8 million miles (4.4 million kilometers) from the gas giant planet on the inbound leg of its initial 53.5-day capture orbit. Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/SwRI/MSSS
› Full image and caption
This Saturday at 5:51 a.m. PDT, (8:51 a.m. EDT, 12:51 UTC) NASA's Juno spacecraft will get closer to the cloud tops of Jupiter than at any other time during its prime mission. At the moment of closest approach, Juno will be about 2,500 miles (4,200 kilometers) above Jupiter's swirling clouds and traveling at 130,000 mph (208,000 kilometers per hour) with respect to the planet. There are 35 more close flybys of Jupiter scheduled during its prime mission (scheduled to end in February of 2018). The Aug. 27 flyby will be the first time Juno will have its entire suite of science instruments activated and looking at the giant planet as the spacecraft zooms past.

"This is the first time we will be close to Jupiter since we entered orbit on July 4," said Scott Bolton, principal investigator of Juno from the Southwest Research Institute in San Antonio. "Back then we turned all our instruments off to focus on the rocket burn to get Juno into orbit around Jupiter. Since then, we have checked Juno from stem to stern and back again. We still have more testing to do, but we are confident that everything is working great, so for this upcoming flyby Juno's eyes and ears, our science instruments, will all be open."

"This is our first opportunity to really take a close-up look at the king of our solar system and begin to figure out how he works," Bolton said.

While the science data from the pass should be downlinked to Earth within days, interpretation and first results are not expected for some time.

"No other spacecraft has ever orbited Jupiter this closely, or over the poles in this fashion," said Steve Levin, Juno project scientist from NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California. "This is our first opportunity and there are bound to be surprises. We need to take our time to make sure our conclusions are correct."

Not only will Juno's suite of eight science instruments be on, the spacecraft's visible light imager -- JunoCam will also be snapping some closeups. A handful of JunoCam images, including the highest resolution imagery of the Jovian atmosphere and the first glimpse of Jupiter's north and south poles, are expected to be released during the later part of next week.

The Juno spacecraft launched on Aug. 5, 2011, from Cape Canaveral, Florida. JPL manages the Juno mission for the principal investigator, Scott Bolton, of Southwest Research Institute in San Antonio. Juno is part of NASA's New Frontiers Program, which is managed at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, for NASA's Science Mission Directorate. Lockheed Martin Space Systems, Denver, built the spacecraft. Caltech, in Pasadena, California, manages JPL for NASA.

http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/news.php?feature=6601
 
Latest news from Juno
Aug. 27, 2016
NASA's Juno Successfully Completes Jupiter Flyby

Jupiter's north polar region is coming into view as NASA's Juno spacecraft approaches the giant planet. This view of Jupiter was taken on August 27, when Juno was 437,000 miles (703,000 kilometers) away.
Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech/SwRI/MSSS
NASA's Juno mission successfully executed its first of 36 orbital flybys of Jupiter today. The time of closest approach with the gas-giant world was 6:44 a.m. PDT (9:44 a.m. EDT, 13:44 UTC) when Juno passed about 2,600 miles (4,200 kilometers) above Jupiter's swirling clouds. At the time, Juno was traveling at 130,000 mph (208,000 kilometers per hour) with respect to the planet. This flyby was the closest Juno will get to Jupiter during its prime mission.



"Early post-flyby telemetry indicates that everything worked as planned and Juno is firing on all cylinders," said Rick Nybakken, Juno project manager at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California.



There are 35 more close flybys of Jupiter planned during Juno's mission (scheduled to end in February 2018). The August 27 flyby was the first time Juno had its entire suite of science instruments activated and looking at the giant planet as the spacecraft zoomed past.



"We are getting some intriguing early data returns as we speak," said Scott Bolton, principal investigator of Juno from the Southwest Research Institute in San Antonio. "It will take days for all the science data collected during the flyby to be downlinked and even more to begin to comprehend what Juno and Jupiter are trying to tell us."



While results from the spacecraft's suite of instruments will be released down the road, a handful of images from Juno's visible light imager -- JunoCam -- are expected to be released the next couple of weeks. Those images will include the highest-resolution views of the Jovian atmosphere and the first glimpse of Jupiter's north and south poles.



"We are in an orbit nobody has ever been in before, and these images give us a whole new perspective on this gas-giant world," said Bolton.



The Juno spacecraft launched on Aug. 5, 2011, from Cape Canaveral, Florida, and arrived at Jupiter on July 4, 2016. JPL manages the Juno mission for the principal investigator, Scott Bolton, of Southwest Research Institute in San Antonio. Juno is part of NASA's New Frontiers Program, which is managed at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, for NASA's Science Mission Directorate. Lockheed Martin Space Systems, Denver, built the spacecraft. Caltech in Pasadena, California, manages JPL for NASA.



More information on the Juno mission is available at:



http://www.nasa.gov/juno
https://www.nasa.gov/feature/jpl/nasas-juno-successfully-completes-jupiter-flyby
 
Juno Captures Jupiter 'Pearl'


Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech/SwRI/MSSS
This image, taken by the JunoCam imager on NASA's Juno spacecraft, highlights the seventh of eight features forming a ‘string of pearls’ on Jupiter -- massive counterclockwise rotating storms that appear as white ovals in the gas giant's southern hemisphere. Since 1986, these white ovals have varied in number from six to nine. There are currently eight white ovals visible.



The image was taken on Dec. 11, 2016, at 9:27 a.m. PST (12:27 EST), as the Juno spacecraft performed its third close flyby of Jupiter. At the time the image was taken, the spacecraft was about 15,300miles (24,600 kilometers) from the planet.

JunoCam is a color, visible-light camera designed to capture remarkable pictures of Jupiter's poles and cloud tops. As Juno's eyes, it will provide a wide view, helping to provide context for the spacecraft's other instruments. JunoCam was included on the spacecraft specifically for purposes of public engagement; although its images will be helpful to the science team, it is not considered one of the mission's science instruments.

NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, California, manages the Juno mission for the principal investigator, Scott Bolton, of Southwest Research Institute in San Antonio. The Juno mission is part of the New Frontiers Program managed by NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, for the Science Mission Directorate. Lockheed Martin Space Systems, Denver, built the spacecraft. JPL is a division of Caltech in Pasadena, California.

DC Agle
818-393-9011
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.
[email protected]

2016-320

https://www.nasa.gov/feature/jpl/jupiter-s-7th-pearl
 
NASA’s Juno Spacecraft Set for Fifth Jupiter Flyby

This enhanced-color image of a mysterious dark spot on Jupiter seems to reveal a Jovian “galaxy” of swirling storms.
Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech/SwRI/MSSS/Roman Tkachenko
Full image and caption
NASA's Juno spacecraft will make its fifth flyby over Jupiter's mysterious cloud tops on Monday, March 27, at 1:52 a.m. PDT (4:52 a.m. EDT, 8:52 UTC).

At the time of closest approach (called perijove), Juno will be about 2,700 miles (4,400 kilometers) above the planet's cloud tops, traveling at a speed of about 129,000 miles per hour (57.8 kilometers per second) relative to the gas-giant planet. All of Juno's eight science instruments will be on and collecting data during the flyby.

"This will be our fourth science pass -- the fifth close flyby of Jupiter of the mission -- and we are excited to see what new discoveries Juno will reveal,” said Scott Bolton, principal investigator of Juno from the Southwest Research Institute in San Antonio. "Every time we get near Jupiter’s cloud tops, we learn new insights that help us understand this amazing giant planet."



The Juno science team continues to analyze returns from previous flybys. Scientists have discovered that Jupiter's magnetic fields are more complicated than originally thought, and that the belts and zones that give the planet's cloud tops their distinctive look extend deep into the its interior. Observations of the energetic particles that create the incandescent auroras suggest a complicated current system involving charged material lofted from volcanoes on Jupiter's moon Io.

Peer-reviewed papers with more in-depth science results from Juno's first flybys are expected to be published within the next few months.

Juno launched on Aug. 5, 2011, from Cape Canaveral, Florida, and arrived in orbit around Jupiter on July 4, 2016. During its mission of exploration, Juno soars low over the planet's cloud tops -- as close as about 2,600 miles (4,100 kilometers). During these flybys, Juno is probing beneath the obscuring cloud cover of Jupiter and studying its auroras to learn more about the planet's origins, structure, atmosphere and magnetosphere.

NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, California, manages the Juno mission for the principal investigator, Scott Bolton, of Southwest Research Institute in San Antonio. The Juno mission is part of the New Frontiers Program managed by NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, for the Science Mission Directorate. Lockheed Martin Space Systems, Denver, built the spacecraft. JPL is a division of Caltech in Pasadena, California.

More information on the Juno mission is available at:

http://www.nasa.gov/juno

http://missionjuno.org

The public can follow the mission on Facebook and Twitter at:

http://www.facebook.com/NASAJuno

http://www.twitter.com/NASAJuno

https://www.nasa.gov/feature/jpl/nasa-s-juno-spacecraft-set-for-fifth-jupiter-flyby
 
Great blog post from Phil Plait on how an asteroid can have a similar stable orbit to Jupiter but in retrograde.

Which brings us to just such a discovery. But this asteroid...well, it’s really weird. Even for a retrograde asteroid.

It’s called 2015 BZ509, and it’s very roughly three kilometers in diameter. As the name implies, it was first discovered in 2015. Right away, it was clear it was retrograde. Intriguingly, though, the orbit calculated based on the observations showed it was in a similar orbit as Jupiter. Not exactly, but close. And that is very odd, indeed.

Why? Well, to be fair, lots of asteroids share Jupiter’s orbit. Due to a quirk in gravity, if you have a big object (like the Sun) with a smaller object (like Jupiter) orbiting it, there are places where the gravity and centrifugal forces balance, allowing objects in those regions to orbit stably. Asteroids in these orbits are, for historical reasons, called Trojan asteroids, and Jupiter has thousands of them.

But a critical factor for a Trojan asteroid is that it has to orbit the Sun prograde. If it shared Jupiter’s orbit but moved retrograde, it would encounter Jupiter twice every orbit, and in a battle like that, folks, Jupiter wins. The asteroid would be ejected by the planet’s mighty gravity in very short order.

So then, how can 2015 BZ509 manage to be where it is? Well, for one thing, it’s not a Trojan. It doesn’t share Jupiter’s orbit; it just has one that’s similar to it. And that’s the key to its survival. Watch:

 
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