This is a still from a cinematic animation. Click here to view the animation in full.
If we were to bury beneath Ganymede’s 150 km-thick crust of mostly ice, we would likely find an ocean 100 km thick, where primitive life could in theory potentially exist. ESA’s Jupiter Icy Moons Explorer (Juice) is going to delve deep into this ocean – but Juice has no need for a huge drill; scientists and engineers have worked tirelessly to design special ‘remote sensing’ instruments to explore the moon whilst flying past and orbiting around it.
Ganymede is Juice’s primary target. During the first, Jupiter-orbiting phase of the mission, the spacecraft will make 12 flybys of the mysterious moon. It will later transfer from orbit around Jupiter to orbit around Ganymede, becoming the first spacecraft ever to orbit a moon other than our own. Juice’s investigations of the moon will begin in earnest in late 2034. Juice will end its mission by colliding with Ganymede’s surface in 2035.
Juice will explore various key topics: Ganymede’s puzzling magnetic field (it is the only moon in the Solar System to generate its own), its hidden ocean, its complex core, its ice content and shell, its interactions with its local environment and that of Jupiter, its past and present activity, and whether or not the moon could be – or ever have been – a habitable environment.
Ganymede is an especially exciting target for a number of reasons. It displays a wide range of surface ages and features, offering a geological record spanning several billion years; it has an active magnetic dynamo and subsurface ocean; and it has a complex and unique relationship with the space environment around its parent planet, Jupiter. Notably, Ganymede’s intrinsic magnetic field has generated a mini ‘magnetic bubble’ (magnetosphere) sitting within Jupiter’s larger bubble, and the two interact in highly complex and intriguing ways.
Juice will shed light on these aspects by…
Discover more about Juice and Jupiter’s icy moons.
ESA’s Jupiter Icy Moons Explorer, Juice, is humanity’s next bold mission to the outer Solar System. It will make detailed observations of gas giant Jupiter and its three large ocean-bearing moons – Ganymede, Callisto and Europa. This ambitious mission will characterise these moons with a powerful suite of remote sensing, geophysical and in situ instruments to discover more about these compelling destinations as potential habitats for past or present life. Juice will monitor Jupiter’s complex magnetic, radiation and plasma environment in depth and its interplay with the moons, studying the Jupiter system as an archetype for gas giant systems across the Universe.
Juice launches on an Ariane 5 from Europe’s Spaceport in Kourou in April 2023. It has an eight year cruise with flybys of Earth and Venus to slingshot it to Jupiter. It will make 35 flybys of the three large moons while orbiting Jupiter, before changing orbits to Ganymede.
Juice is a mission under ESA leadership with contributions from NASA, JAXA and the Israeli Space Agency. It is the first Large-class mission in ESA’s Cosmic Vision programme.