Small Bodies Mission Support

Galileo Mission to Jupiter and Europa

Galileo launched on 18 October 1989 and began orbiting Jupiter in December 1995. During the outbound trip, Galileo flew by the asteroids (951) Gaspra, in October 1991, and (253) Ida, in August 1993. Images from the latter flyby revealed that Ida was itself orbited by a tiny moon, subsequently named Dactyl. This was the first known case of a solar system small body with its own natural satellite. Galileo was also positioned to observe the far side of Jupiter in July 1994, when the fragments of comet D/Shoemaker-Levy 9 impacted the planet. Once in orbit around Jupiter, Galileo dropped a probe to record the first direct observations of the Jovian atmosphere.

The original Galileo mission was extended into the Galileo Europa Mission, in which the spacecraft undertook an intensive study of the moon Europa, the Io plasma torus and Io itself. The mission ended on 21 September 2003, when the spacecraft descended into the Jovian atmosphere.

The Galileo Project web site is maintained by NASA/JPL. There is a separate home site for the atmospheric probe and its instruments, maintained by the NASA Ames Research Center.

The SBN, through its Interplanetary Dust Subnode and, in cooperation with the Planetary Plasma Interactions Node, is the contact PDS node archiving the Dust Detector System data both in the encounter and cruise phases.

Mission Home Page Instruments Mission Data Target Data

On-Board Instruments

Instrument/Investigation Measuring Small Bodies Data
available below
Dust Detector System
(DDS)
Interplanetary and Jovian dust DDS data, 1990-1997
Energetic Particles Detector
(EPD)
Charged particles in the immediate vicinity of Galileo none
Extreme Ultraviolet Spectometer
(EUV)
Volatile gases from Galilean satellites; upper Jovain atmosphere none
Ultraviolet Spectrometer
(UVS)
Gasses and aerosols in the Jovian atmosphere EDRs, SL9 impact
Results, SL9 impact
Heavy Ion Counter
(HIC)
Monitor environment for energetic heavy ions none
Magnetometer
(MAG)
Magnetic fields in the immediate vicinity of Galileo none
Near-Infrared Mapping Spectrometer
(NIMS)
Spectral observations of Jupiter and its moons in the range 0.7-5.2 micrometers SL9 Impact
Plasma Subsystem
(PLS)
Low-energy plasma in the immediate vicinty of Galileo none
Photopolarimeter-Radiometer
(PPR)
Visible and IR observations of atmosphere SL9 Impact
Plasma Wave Subsystem
(PWS)
Electrostatic and electromagnetic 3D components of plasma waves none
Solid State Imaging
(SSI)
High-resolution visible light images SL9 Impact
Radio Science Microwave radio signal experiments none

Mission Data

Instrument/
Investigation
Description
Target Description of Available Data Data Link
DDS Interplanetary Dust Cruise and Jupiter data, 1990-1997 On-line
MAG (243) Ida,
(951) Gaspra
Fly-by On-line
NIMS SL9 SL9/Jupiter impact CDROM
PPR SL9 SL9/Jupiter impact CDROM
SSI SL9 SL9/Jupiter impact CDROM
(243) Ida,
(951) Gaspra
Fly-by images

On-line

UVS SL9 SL9/Jupiter impact, EDRs CDROM
SL9/Jupiter impact, reduced data CDROM

Other Target Observations

Target Target Type Other Data Sets Targeting this Object
Dust Interplanetary Dust Ulysses DDS: Results from the Ulysses Dust Detector System
D/Shoemaker-Levy 9
(SL9)
Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9/Jupiter Impact CDROM archive
(243) Ida,
(951) Gaspra
Asteroid Ida/Gaspra Special Collection: Ground-based and Galileo data