ED51E-06:
JunoCam Outreach: Lessons Learned from Juno’s Earth Flyby
Friday, 19 December 2014: 9:15 AM
Candice J Hansen1, Mike Caplinger2 and Michael Ravine2, (1)Planetary Science Institute Albuquerque, Albuquerque, NM, United States, (2)Malin Space Science Systems, San Diego, CA, United States
Abstract:
The JunoCam visible imager is on the Juno spacecraft explicitly to include the public in the operation of a spacecraft instrument at Jupiter. Amateur astronomers will provide images in 2015 and 2016, as the spacecraft approaches Jupiter, to be used for planning purposes, and also during the mission to provide context for JunoCam’s high-resolution pictures. Targeted imaging of specific features would enhance science value, but the dynamic nature of the jovian atmosphere makes this almost completely dependent on ground-based observations. The public will be involved in the decision of which images to acquire in each perijove pass. Partnership with the amateur image processing community will be essential for processing images during the Juno mission. This piece of the virtual team plan was successfully carried out as Juno executed its earth flyby gravity assist in 2013. Although we will have a professional ops team at Malin Space Science Systems, the tiny size of the team overall means that the public participation is not just an extra – it is essential to our success.