Jupiter Juno mission: 5 facts you need to know- BBC News

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A Nasa spacecraft is about to arrive at the largest planet in the solar system - Jupiter. The probe launched five years ago and has travelled nearly three billion kilometres to reach its destination.
Entering into orbit will be fraught with dangers - but if the spacecraft succeeds, it will give us our best understanding to date of this giant, mysterious world. BBC science correspondent Rebecca Morelle tells us the top five things you need to know about this mission.

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it's interesting!I need to know more please

barrycherno
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The BBC knows as much about science as it does about factual reporting

dukeickthorn
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Fascinating. Reminds me of Dr Who. I just wish there was a super advanced life form that lived on all that energy, hiding out on Jupiter

phildobson
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Like the content, but sort your sound out, BBC!

garyking
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The fact that it's solar panels could generate up to 14 kW of electricity back on earth

alphaadhito
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"It's spinning around so fast its gravity is like a giant slingshot"
Eh...

andrewgordon
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so how the hell will it not bash into stuff! *fingers crossed*

katehollyoake
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Lots of brain dead conspiracy comments here.

kyoryuviolet
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Is this going to solve world hunger? As much as I love Jupiter but it's pointless to spend billions on such silly kiddish and naive stuff! This whole idea feels like it came from a 9 year old me.

annasamwel
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Clone girl..who you NASA..really?..haha banana..Juno? discuss 1981 Jupiter s. Moon missions? NASA..tell them something...after all. THEY PAY FOR THE CRAPPY WORK. Tell THEM! CUZ YOUR GIGS UP..if there was a universe...YOUD BE TOAST!

Cloudy