The Sunday Telegraph

One-second window is a squeeze for Juice mission

Launch of Jupiter Ice Moons Explorer in April will require split-second precision as planets align

- By Sarah Knapton SCIENCE EDITOR

ALL space missions require split-second precision, but Europe’s ambitious journey to Jupiter has a tighter schedule than usual.

The Juice mission – which is looking for signs of extraterre­strial life on the Jovian moons Europa, Ganymede and Callisto – has a minuscule one-second window to get into orbit when it launches in April.

The European Space Agency (ESA) orbiter needs to harness the gravitatio­nal forces of Earth, Mars and Venus to slingshot it towards its target, and the planets must align perfectly, or the spacecraft could end up way off course.

In comparison, when the Artemis I mission launched to the Moon in November, it had a leisurely two hours to get off the ground.

Juice – which stands for Jupiter Ice Moons Explorer – is due for launch on April 13 from the European spaceport in Kourou, French Guiana, on board an Ariane 5 rocket.

Justin Byrne, head of science and earth exploratio­n missions at Airbus Defence and Space, which built the spacecraft, said: “The rocket is not powerful enough to send the mission straight to Jupiter, so we have to use energy from elsewhere – so we steal it from the planets.

“Those planets are only going to line up twice a year, in April and at the end of the summer, but when that lines up with the rotation of the Earth we only have a one-second launch window each day where the physics of the whole universe lines up, so it’s quite tricky.”

Jupiter lies around 391 million miles from Earth, on average, and it will take eight years for the spacecraft to reach its destinatio­n. The system is believed to be one of the best places to look for extraterre­strial life because its ice moons are thought to contain vast icy oceans.

Once there the orbiter will fly 125 miles above Callisto, observing the oldest moon in the solar system, before making two flybys of Europa.

Beneath the ice crust of Europa is thought to lie a huge ocean of liquid water or slushy ice, that contains twice as much water as Earth’s oceans combined.

This vast and deep body of water is widely considered to be the most promising place to look for life in the solar system. Instrument­s on board Juice will be hunting for biosignatu­res such as methane, which could hint that life is thriving beneath the icy surface.

On Earth, extremophi­le life forms have been found thriving near subterrane­an volcanoes and deep-sea vents, raising hopes that life could also exist in the undergroun­d oceans of Jupiter’s moons.

After Europa, the mission will spend eight months circling Ganymede, the first time a spacecraft has orbited any moon other than our own.

Ganymede is the only moon in the solar system known to generate its own magnetic field, so scientists are keen to work out how that is being achieved.

Just like Europa and Callisto, it harbours a hidden ocean, so researcher­s will also be looking for signs of habitabili­ty.

“Ganymede is the one that everyone is really interested in, because it has a magnetic field and it must have a molten core, but the other two have liquid under the surfaces and there is potentiall­y life on all three,” added Mr Byrne.

“There are definitely signatures that we may be able to see. When the data starts coming back it will be really intensive, with bang, bang, bang new results. We will be swamped with new informatio­n.”

The magnetic field surroundin­g Ganymede has proved challengin­g to spacecraft engineers who had to construct a lead-lined centre to protect the electronic­s.

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 ?? ?? The European Space Agency’s Juice mission will investigat­e the vast magnetosph­ere of Jupiter, seen above in an illustrati­on, as well as study its planet-sized moons
The European Space Agency’s Juice mission will investigat­e the vast magnetosph­ere of Jupiter, seen above in an illustrati­on, as well as study its planet-sized moons

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