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NASA's $1 billion mission to Jupiter may end this summer — here are the best images Juno has taken of the giant planet so far

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All good things must come to a end, and Juno— NASA's $1-billion mission to study Jupiter like never before — is no exception.

The probe launched from Earth in August 2011, reached Jupiter in July 2016, and is scheduled to make its last two of 14 high-speed flybys around the gas giant in May and July.

But that doesn't mean Juno is finished beaming back astoundingnewphotos of Jupiter. At least not yet.

For months, NASA and Juno mission managers have discussed a "continuation mission" to extend the probe's time at Jupiter and unravel even more of the planet's super-size mysteries. Scientists are hungry for more data, especially since Juno got a sticky engine valve when it arrived — a glitch that dramatically slowed the pace of its discoveries.

"I think for sure the continuation mission will go on,"Glenn Orton, a lead Juno mission team member and planetary scientist at NASA JPL, told Business Insider. NASA has yet to approve funding, though, so he added: "I'm hopeful but nervous."

Should NASA decline an extension, the probe will plunge into Jupiter this summer. "Stay tuned," a space agency representative told Business Insider in an email, adding that more information about the mission will come in May.

With Juno's first (and just maybe last) mission at Jupiter ending in July, we've rounded up some of the probe's most jaw-dropping photos, data imaging, and animations.

SEE ALSO: NASA has released stunning new images of Jupiter's bizarre, storm-choked north pole

SEE ALSO: NASA finally has the map it needs to explore Europa for signs of alien life

Jupiter is the largest planet in the solar system — so massive, in fact, that it doesn't technically orbit the sun.

Source: Business Insider



The world is about 318 times as massive and 1,321 times as voluminous as Earth. Few spacecraft have ever visited it.

Source: Universe Today



Juno was the first probe to fly above and below Jupiter, photograph the planet's poles, and begin to unravel their mysteries.

Source: Business Insider



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

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