Nasa’s Juno space probe today was set to pass the closest it will get to the planet Jupiter during the main phase of its planned mission to the gas giant, the US space agency’s officials said.
Juno was to swing within some 4,200km (2,600 miles) of the solar system’s largest planet, the closest any spacecraft has passed, travelling at 130,000mph (208,000kph) at around 5:51am (12:51 GMT).
It was the first time Juno’s eight scientific instruments and its camera were switched on, marking the science mission’s start, officials said in a statement on Nasa’s website.
“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,” said Scott Bolton, Juno’s principal investigator from the Southwest Research Institute in San Antonio, Texas.
Juno first swept close to Jupiter when it entered orbit around the planet early last month after a nearly five-year voyage to help study the solar system’s origins.
However, all the probe’s instruments were turned off not to interfere with its positioning as it entered the 53.5-day orbit.
Juno will now be probing Jupiter’s many layers to measure their composition, magnetic field and other properties.
Scientists hope to learn the source of the planet’s fierce winds and whether Jupiter is made entirely of gas or has a solid core.
They also expect to learn more about the planet’s great red spot, a huge storm that has raged for thousands of years.


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