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... This mission was worth its weight in gold. ... Claudia Alexander, the Galileo project manager, at the conclusion of the Galileo Mission. The Galileo Mission began in 1989 and continued its great odyssey to the gas giant known as Jupiter until the year 2003. This mission brought many scientific findings and knowledge to the field of astronomy. This report relays information about Jupiter and the Galileo Mission. It outlines from the beginning of the launch to the conclusion of the mission.
The Galileo Mission was named after the Italian Renaissance scientist Galileo Galilei. ... Since Galileo provided astronomy with many new discoveries, it was only fair to name the mission to Jupiter after this great astronomer. ... This mission found a lot of new information not only about Jupiter and its moon, but helps us to better understand how the sun and planets formed over four-and-a-half billion years ago.
The Galileo Mission is actually not the first spacecraft to visit Jupiter, but is actually the sixth mission. ...
The mission had many scientific goals. According to the web page sponsored by
NASA, the science goals of the Galileo Probe were to:
1. ...
The objectives of the Galileo Orbiter were to:
1. ... gov/planetary/galileo. ... Pictured below is a detailed image of the Galileo Spacecraft.
After the successful Atlantis launch, the IUS rocket then blasted the Galileo spacecraft out of the Earth’s orbit and toward the planet Venus. ...
The three-stage IUS rocket was not the only problem that the Galileo Mission ran into. ...
Scientists took full advantage of the Galileo’s flight path around the Earth and Venus. ... The Galileo also became the first spacecraft to encounter an asteroid. ... Then, the Galileo flew by another asteroid named Ida. ... In 1993, Galileo’s cameras took amazing pictures of the comet Shoemaker Levy 9 as it slammed into Jupiter’s atmosphere. The image below was taken by the Galileo cameras and shows the travel path of the Comet Shoemaker Levy 9. ... So not only did the Galileo Mission bring great scientific findings about Jupiter, it also brought new information about the entire Solar System.
On July 13, 1995, after six years of traveling through space, the Galileo spacecraft finally reached Jupiter. Galileo’s atmospheric probe was released and began its five month free fall towards Jupiter.
Approximate Word count = 1875 Approximate Pages = 7.5 (250 words per page double spaced)
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