The probe will then have one final port of call: Jupiter's largest moon, deputy project manager Tim Larson said. "After we're done with the science mission, the way we end is by crashing into one ...
Watch videos for details: 1. Mission goal: Europa Clipper will orbit Jupiter and focus on the planet’s ice-encased moon Europa. NASA said the Europa Clipper spacecraft is not a life-detection ...
Jupiter definitely is not on that list, as yet, but its moon Europa may well be one day. NASA's Europa Clipper will be bound for Jupiter and also do flybys of its moon Europa. However, since this ...
The goal of the satellite is to explore Jupiter's icy moon Europa, which scientists believe could support life. "Many scientists believe that Europa is the best candidate for finding life beyond ...
To study’s Jupiter’s moon, Europa. (Photo by Gene Blevins/Contributing Photographer) What’s atypical about this day is that Hinzer will need to make sure that dozens of visiting journalists ...
To study’s Jupiter’s moon, Europa. (Photo by Gene Blevins/Contributing Photographer) What’s atypical about this day is that Hinzer will need to make sure that dozens of visiting journalists don’t ...
Still seven years from Jupiter, the JUICE mission is pretending it's already there. Though it's still seven years from reaching Jupiter, the JUICE mission is proceeding apace — and a recent test ...
Though it's still seven years from reaching Jupiter, the JUICE mission is proceeding apace — and a recent test-run simulated the mission's spacecraft flying by the Jovian icy moon, Callisto.
NASA's new Clipper spacecraft, scheduled to launch in October, will spend 10 years traveling through space. It aims to explore Europa, a moon of Jupiter, to study conditions for life, such as liquid ...
The spacecraft, scheduled to investigate and perform flybys of Europa, Jupiter's moon, where data suggests a global ocean of water lies beneath the icy surface which may be habitable for life.
The probe will then have one final port of call: Jupiter's largest moon, deputy project manager Tim Larson said. "After we're done with the science mission, the way we end is by crashing into one ...