
NASA’s Juno spacecraft has performed over two-dozen flybys of Jupiter and its largest moon, Ganymede, and now you can watch it from a “starship captain” point of view.
Juno performed the closest flyby of Ganymede that’s happened in more than two decades on June 7. Less than a day later, it performed its 34th flyby of Jupiter. It flew from one of the planet’s poles to the other and it did so in less than three hours, and you can watch that flyby from a “starship captain” point of…
