NASA’s Juno Mission Getting Closer to Jupiter’s Moon Io

This JunoCam image of the Jovian moon Io was collected during Juno’s flyby
This JunoCam image of the Jovian moon Io was collected during Juno’s flyby of the moon on March 1, 2023. At the time of closest approach, Juno was about 32,000 miles (51,500 kilometers) away from Io.
This JunoCam image of the Jovian moon Io was collected during Juno's flyby of the moon on March 1, 2023. At the time of closest approach, Juno was about 32,000 miles (51,500 kilometers) away from Io. Credit: Image data: NASA/JPL-Caltech/SwRI/MSSS/. Image processing, left to right: Björn Jónsson (CC NC SA), Jason Perry (CC NC SA), Mike Ravine (CC BY), Kevin M. Gill (CC BY) The gas giant orbiter has flown over 510 million miles and also documented close encounters with three of Jupiter's four largest moons. NASA's Juno spacecraft will fly past Jupiter's volcanic moon Io on Tuesday, May 16, and then the gas giant itself soon after. The flyby of the Jovian moon will be the closest to date, at an altitude of about 22,060 miles (35,500 kilometers). Now in the third year of its extended mission to investigate the interior of Jupiter, the solar-powered spacecraft will also explore the ring system where some of the gas giant's inner moons reside.
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