Juice: Live from the Moon + Q&A with the team
Join us for Juice’s flyby of the Moon. We’ll be sharing images as soon as we can after Juice sends them down to Earth. Be among the first people in the world to see these images, and ask your questions about the mission and its lunar-Earth flyby to our panel of Juice team members.
The images will be captured using Juice’s two ‘monitoring cameras’, designed to watch the unfolding of Juice’s solar panels, antennas and booms in space in the weeks after the spacecraft launched into space in April 2023. The cameras have successfully completed their task. But we thought… what will we see if we point them at the Moon?
We don’t know how the images will look. It’s the first time the cameras will point at a big bright object in space. And we’re sharing them publicly before we’ve had a chance to process them at all.
Let’s see what happens!
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Is there enough fuel for Juice to complete its mission?
I have actually featured a YEC video explaining the possibility of the variable speed of light (without changing the speed of light) . I don’t expect anyone to agree with it until they can understand it.
I have a thought experiment that will demonstrate what we are talking about.
Hold your hands about a foot apart representing 186,000 miles. Then watch an imaginary photon travel from one hand to the other in the time that it takes for you to say “one thousand and one” representing one second. That is C the speed of light.
Now spread your hands apart still representing 186,000 miles while saying “one thousand and one” as fast as you can and watch the same imaginary photon speed up as it passes from one hand to the other while maintaining the speed of light C the same as before.
This is what is happening in general relativity comparing the gravitational effects of one amount of gravity with another amount of gravity in another place. You can do the same thought experiment in reverse too.
You can clearly see the speed go faster and slower depending on the amount of gravity which alters both the rate of time and the measure of distance simultaneously.
great work, good quality.
This livestream starts after closest approach to the Moon. I found this very disappointing, part of the reason for a livestream is to be in sync with the event under discussion.
komm gut zurück JUICE bin unheimlich STOLZ auf ESA ihr seit meine helden🛰🛰🛰🛰🛰🚀🚀 UMARME EUCH ALLE grüsse aus oberfranken
It can be seen with binoculars or telescope on the North Western Hemisphere as it crosses the night sky
Will there be a live stream of the Earth flyby at 21:57 UT (23:57 CET)?
Time for me to recreate this in Kerbal Space Program 😂
Made history. ESA 👍
Man this is great!