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VK8PDG > NASA     17.10.01 19:38l 80 Lines 3552 Bytes #999 (0) @ WW
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Subj: GALILEO MILLENNIUM MISSION STATUS
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MEDIA RELATIONS OFFICE
JET PROPULSION LABORATORY
CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND SPACE ADMINISTRATION
PASADENA, CALIF. 91109.  TELEPHONE (818) 354-5011
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov

           GALILEO MILLENNIUM MISSION STATUS
                     October 16, 2001     

     NASA's Galileo spacecraft successfully completed a close 
flyby to study Jupiter's moon Io at 0123 Universal Time today 
(6:23 p.m. Oct. 15, Pacific Daylight Time), during the long-lived 
spacecraft's 32nd orbit around Jupiter.

     Galileo passed closer to Io than ever before, within about 
181 kilometers (112 miles) of ground level near Io's south pole. 
  

     Engineers at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, 
Calif., said that signals confirming the spacecraft's basic 
health arrived within an hour after the flyby. The signals were 
received via JPL's Deep Space Network antenna facility near 
Madrid, Spain.

     "Jupiter's radiation belts make flying near Io risky, but 
Galileo has come through for us again," said JPL's Dr. Eilene 
Theilig, Galileo project manager.

     Galileo has been orbiting Jupiter since 1995. It has already 
endured more than three times as much radiation as it was 
designed to tolerate. NASA has extended Galileo's original two-
year orbital mission three times to take advantage of the 
spacecraft's continuing ability to make scientific discoveries.

     As of 1500 UT (8 a.m. PDT) today, the spacecraft had 
recorded about 70 percent of the scientific data that its 
instruments had been programmed to collect during this swing 
through the inner portion of the Jovian system.  The encounter 
period that began Oct. 13 includes more-distant observations of 
Jupiter and the moon Europa, as well as the close-up examination 
of Io.

     The images and other scientific data from the encounter will 
be transmitted to Deep Space Network antennas in Spain, Australia 
and California over the next three months.

     Engineering data already received, such as voltage 
readings, suggest that Galileo's solid-state camera functioned 
properly during the flyby. However, the camera's performance 
won't be known for sure until transmission of the pictures, 
which is due to begin in late October. The camera has 
malfunctioned intermittently in the past year because 
radiation has degraded its electronics. Galileo engineers sent 
new software to the camera two weeks ago designed to minimize 
chances for recurrence of the problem.

     Among the high-priority science observations for the flyby 
are magnetic-field measurements near Io's south pole, useful for 
understanding the moon's interior and interactive processes 
within Jupiter's large magnetic environment. Other instruments 
were scheduled to observe details and changes in several volcanic 
areas on Io's surface, including a new hot spot and plume 
eruption discovered on the most recent flyby, in August.

     Io is the most volcanically active world known. It orbits 
closest to Jupiter of the planet's four major moons.  Tidal 
stress from the gravitational pull of Jupiter and the outlying 
moons heats Io's interior and sustains the volcanism. 

     Additional information about Galileo and the discoveries 
it 
has made since it was launched from NASA's Space Shuttle Atlantis 
in 1989 is available at http://galileo.jpl.nasa.gov . JPL, a 
division of the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, 
manages the Galileo mission for NASA's Office of Space Science, 
Washington, D.C. 

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