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Jupiter mission blasts off

Friday 05 August 2011 12:43 EDT
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Juno blasted off aboard an unmanned rocket today from Cape Canaveral
Juno blasted off aboard an unmanned rocket today from Cape Canaveral (AP)

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Nasa has launched a solar-powered spacecraft on a five-year mission to Jupiter.

The robotic explorer, named Juno, blasted off aboard an unmanned rocket today from Cape Canaveral. It will take Juno five years to reach the largest planet in the solar system.

Juno is solar powered with three huge panels, a first for a spacecraft intended to roam so far from the sun. The total mission costs 1.1 billion dollars (£671 million).

Scientists hope to discover the recipe for making planets, by identifying Jupiter's secret ingredients. The gas giant is believed to be the solar system's oldest planet.

Attached to Juno are three little Lego figures.

They represent the Italian physicist Galileo, who discovered Jupiter's biggest moons; the Roman god Jupiter; and his wife Juno, for whom the spacecraft is named.

AP

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