
Reblogged by cstanhope@social.coop ("Your friendly 'net denizen"):
johncarlosbaez@mathstodon.xyz ("John Carlos Baez") wrote:
The Europa Clipper finally took off! It'll reach this icy, water-filled moon of Jupiter in 2030. But it won't orbit that moon. Instead, it will fly by Europa 44 times, tracing out these wonderful tracks.
Why not orbit Europa? There's too much radiation that close to Jupiter, and the Clipper can collect data much faster than it can transmit it to Earth. If it orbited Europa it would fry before it could tell us very much!
Thus, the Clipper will spend most of its time farther from Jupiter, transmitting data to Earth. Using gravity assists from 2 other moons, it will occasionally swoop down, zip past Europa, and make more measurements.
In its 3½ year life, the Europa Clipper will get 2.8 megarads of radiation from Jupiter. This is about 280 times the amount that would kill you! Jupiter is pretty, but don't try to live nearby.
(1/n)
Attachments:
- A picture of Jupiter's moon Europa in front of Jupiter, and 44 paths that the Europa Clipper will take as it repeatedly flies past this moon. The paths go all over, since the plane is to achieve global coverage of Europa during successive flybys. Picture by NASA available on Wikicommons here: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:EuropaClipper.jpg (remote)