The space agency received some online backlash for crushing people's dreams.
NASA’s Juno mission captured this enormous 'frown' on the gas giant.
The newly discovered, 320 mile-per-hour jet disturbs layers of the gas giant’s atmosphere.
The Juno spacecraft captured new images of the most volcanically active body of the solar system during a recent encounter.
Webb Telescope spotted objects that are roughly the size of Jupiter—but they don’t orbit any parent star.
AST SpaceMobile's BlueWalker 3 satellite is one of the brightest objects in the night sky. Alarmingly, it's the first of about 100, so the worst is yet to come.
The carbon appears to have spilled out of the moon's subsurface oceans, rather than arriving via a meteorite or other outside source.
Nope, it's not the Death Star, but rather Io, teeming with hundreds of fiery volcanoes and reigning as the solar system's volcanic champion.
An amateur astronomer spotted a bright flash of light on the gas giant, indicating a small impact.
Io is the most volcanically active world in the solar system, with hundreds of volcanoes that erupt with massive fountains of lava.
Using Webb, scientists have discovered elusive chemical compounds, each on a different Jovian moon, including one that's a common disinfectant.
Astronomers say it's the first piece of evidence to suggest that a pair of planets can share the same orbit.
The JUICE mission's ultraviolet spectrograph gathered data for the first time, revealing our galaxy's bright stars.
A new image from the $10 billion observatory reveals the gas giant’s ring structure and its moons.
The spacecraft had run into some trouble deploying a 52-foot-long antenna, but is now fully primed and ready as it continues along its eight-year journey.
The spacecraft was a million miles from Earth when it was spotted by the Airbus telescope.
Astronomers said in February that Jupiter had the most moons with 92, but now Saturn is stealing the title back.
JUICE’s 52-foot-long antenna is now at full length, but it required some serious coaxing—and a big jolt—to get the job done.
JUICE is having some difficulties deploying one of its most crucial science instruments—a tool for scanning the subsurfaces of Jupiter's icy moons.
The recently-launched JUICE mission is on an eight year journey to Jupiter to explore its icy moons, which the spacecraft will study for signs of habitability.