4.3 Article

Juno's Earth flyby: the Jovian infrared Auroral Mapper preliminary results

Journal

ASTROPHYSICS AND SPACE SCIENCE
Volume 361, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10509-016-2842-9

Keywords

Jupiter; Moon; Instruments and techniques; Image processing; Modeling

Funding

  1. Italian Space Agency under the ASI-INAF [I/010/10/0, 2014-050-R.0]

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The Jovian InfraRed Auroral Mapper, JIRAM, is an image-spectrometer onboard the NASA Juno spacecraft flying to Jupiter. The instrument has been designed to study the aurora and the atmosphere of the planet in the spectral range 2-5 mu m. The very first scientific observation taken with the instrument was at the Moon just before Juno's Earth fly-by occurred on October 9, 2013. The purpose was to check the instrument regular operation modes and to optimize the instrumental performances. The testing activity will be completed with pointing and a radiometric/ spectral calibrations shortly after Jupiter Orbit Insertion. Then the reconstruction of some Moon infrared images, together with co-located spectra used to retrieve the lunar surface temperature, is a fundamental step in the instrument operation tuning. The main scope of this article is to serve as a reference to future users of the JIRAM datasets after public release with the NASA Planetary Data System.

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