Crucial antenna jams on £1.4bn spacecraft bound for Jupiter’s moons

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Crucial Antenna Jams On £1.4Bn Spacecraft Bound For Jupiter’s Moons
Juice mission to Jupiter
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By Marcia Dunn, Associated Press

A critical antenna is jammed on a Jupiter-bound spacecraft launched two weeks ago, the European Space Agency reported on Friday.

The 16-metre radar antenna on Juice unfolded only one-third of the way following lift-off, according to the space agency.

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Engineers suspect a tiny pin may be protruding. Flight controllers in Germany plan to fire the spacecraft’s engine in hopes of shaking the pin loose.

If that does not work, they said they have plenty of time to solve the problem.

Juice, short for Jupiter Icy Moons Explorer, will not reach the giant planet until 2031.

It is taking a roundabout path to get there, including gravity-assist flybys of Earth and our moon, and Venus.

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The radar antenna is needed to peer beneath the icy crust of three Jupiter moons suspected of harbouring underground oceans and possibly life, a major goal of the nearly 1.8 billion US dollars (£1.4 billion) mission.

Its targets include Callisto, Europa and Ganymede, the largest moon in the solar system.

The space agency said everything else is going well with the spacecraft, about the size of a small bus.

A radio antenna, solar panels and a 10.6-metre boom for measuring Jupiter’s magnetic field have all been successfully deployed.

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