Media Information

 
 
 
Collection:
NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory Collection
Title:
Jupiter's Magnetosphere
Creator:
NASA/JPL-Caltech
Description:
This image taken on Jan. 4 and 5, 2001, by the ion and neutral mass spectrometer instrument on NASA's Cassini spacecraft makes the huge magnetosphere surrounding Jupiter visible in a way no instrument on any previous spacecraft has been able to do. The magnetosphere is a bubble of charged particles trapped within the magnetic environment of the planet. In this picture, a magnetic field is sketched over the image to place the energetic neutral atom emissions in perspective. This sketch extends in the horizontal plane to a width 30 times the radius of Jupiter. Also shown for scale and location are the disk of Jupiter (black circle) and the approximate position (yellow circles) of the doughnut-shaped torus created from material spewed out by volcanoes on Io, one of Jupiter's large moons. Some of the fast-moving ions within the magnetosphere pick up electrons to become neutral atoms, and once they become neutral, they can escape Jupiter's magnetic field, flying out from the magnetosphere at speeds of thousands of kilometers, or miles, per second. Cassini's instrument for imaging the magnetosphere builds an image from these atoms reaching the spacecraft, analagous to the way a normal camera builds an image from photons. Additional information about Cassini is available online at: http://www.jpl.nasa…. Cassini is a cooperative mission of NASA, the European Space Agency and the Italian Space Agency. JPL, a division of the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, manages Cassini for NASA's Office of Space Science, Washington, D.C. ##### Image Credit: NASA/JPL/ Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory.
Date:
1/29/01
Year:
2001
Contributor:
JPL Archives
What:
Ion and Neutral Mass Spectrometer (INMS)
What:
Spectrometer
What:
Cassini
What:
Jupiter
Where:
California
Where:
Washington, D.C.

Jupiter's Magnetosphere