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Translated from Indonesian to English - www.onlinedoctranslator.

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NASA Releases 'Ghost' Sounds Recorded on Jupiter's Moon

CNN Indonesia

Tuesday, 21 Dec 2021 13:32 WIB

Jakarta, CNN Indonesia -- The Juno spacecraft belonging to the United States Aeronautics and Space
Administration (NASA) has recorded what they call a "ghost" sound from Jupiter's largest satellite,
Ganymede. NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory has revealed that a 50-second audio recording has been
obtained from data that Juno collected during his crossing of Ganymede on June 7 this year. This audio
recording consists of a series of "beeps" and "bloops" at different frequencies. Ganymede is the largest
moon in our solar system and the only moon that has its own magnetic field. At 3,280 miles (5,262
kilometers) in diameter, Ganymede is even larger than Mercury and the dwarf planet Pluto. And this
craft arrived at Jupiter on July 4, 2016 after a five-year journey. This makes the flight near Ganymede on
June 7, 2021, the closest spacecraft to a moon since the flight near Galileo in May 2000. Reporting from
the Daily Mail, at the time of this flight the solar-powered Juno spacecraft was within 645 miles (1,038
kilometers) from Ganymede's surface and moving at a relative speed of 41,600 miles per hour (67,000
kilometers per hour). The audio recording data was collected by the Juno's Waves instrument, which
captures electric and magnetic radio waves generated in Jupiter's massive magnetic field or
magnetosphere. This makes the flight near Ganymede on June 7, 2021, the closest spacecraft to a moon
since the flight near Galileo in May 2000. Reporting from the Daily Mail, at the time of this flight the
solar-powered Juno spacecraft was within 645 miles (1,038 kilometers) from Ganymede's surface and
moving at a relative speed of 41,600 miles per hour (67,000 kilometers per hour). The audio recording
data was collected by the Juno's Waves instrument, which captures electric and magnetic radio waves
generated in Jupiter's massive magnetic field or magnetosphere. This makes the flight near Ganymede
on June 7, 2021, the closest spacecraft to a moon since the flight near Galileo in May 2000. Reporting
from the Daily Mail, at the time of this flight the solar-powered Juno spacecraft was within 645 miles
(1,038 kilometers) from Ganymede's surface and moving at a relative speed of 41,600 miles per hour
(67,000 kilometers per hour). The audio recording data was collected by the Juno's Waves instrument,
which captures electric and magnetic radio waves generated in Jupiter's massive magnetic field or
magnetosphere. at the time of this flight the solar-powered Juno spacecraft was within 645 miles (1,038
kilometers) of Ganymede's surface and traveling at a relative speed of 41,600 miles per hour (67,000
kilometers per hour). The audio recording data was collected by the Juno's Waves instrument, which
captures electric and magnetic radio waves generated in Jupiter's massive magnetic field or
magnetosphere. at the time of this flight the solar-powered Juno spacecraft was within 645 miles (1,038
kilometers) of Ganymede's surface and traveling at a relative speed of 41,600 miles per hour (67,000
kilometers per hour). The audio recording data was collected by the Juno's Waves instrument, which
captures electric and magnetic radio waves generated in Jupiter's massive magnetic field or
magnetosphere.

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