Artist concept of Mars Odyssey mapping mission.  http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA04245
Artist Concept of Mars Odyssey Mapping Artist Concept
Artist concept of NASA's 2001 Mars Odyssey spacecraft.  http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA04244
Artist Concept of Mars Odyssey
Artist concept of NASA Artist concept of Mars Exploration Rover MER from December, 2002.  http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA04240
Artist Concept of Mars Exploration Rover
Artist concept of NASA Artist concept of Mars Exploration Rover MER from December, 2002.  http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA04239
Artist Concept of Mars Exploration Rover
This artist's concept shows the Mars Helicopter on the Martian surface.  https://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA23771
Artist's Concept: Mars Helicopter
This artist's rendering shows a concept for a robot called AquaSimian that would assist with hazardous situations underwater. The concept is derived from RoboSimian, a land-based robot designed and built at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California. RoboSimian is shown in PIA19313.  http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA19315
AquaSimian Poster Artist Concept
Artist concept of NASA Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter.  http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA04241
Artist concept of Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter
Artist concept of Mars Odyssey orbit insertion.  http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA04246
Artist Concept of Mars Odyssey Aerobraking
Artist's concept of a young, newly discovered planet, exposed to observation by a warped debris disk.  https://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA26601
Young Exoplanet (Artist's Concept)
This artist concept of the Lunar Prospector shows the spacecraft in lunar orbit. Instrument masts are fully deployed.  http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA18162
Lunar Prospector Artist Concept
Artist concept of NASA's Jason 1 spacecraft from December, 2002.  http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA04237
Artist Concept of Jason 1
Artist's concept of the current mission configuration. SIM PlanetQuest (formerly called Space Interferometry Mission), currently under development, will determine the positions and distances of stars several hundred times more accurately than any previous program. This accuracy will allow SIM to determine the distances to stars throughout the galaxy and to probe nearby stars for Earth-sized planets. SIM will open a window to a new world of discoveries.  http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA04248
Artist concept of SIM PlanetQuest Artist Concept
This artist's concept shows the InSight spacecraft, encapsulated in its aeroshell, as it cruises to Mars.  https://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA22547
InSight Cruises to Mars (Artist's Concept)
Artist conception of the Clementine spacecraft, a joint mission of the U.S. Strategic Defense Initiative Organization and NASA.  http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA18159
Clementine Fully Deployed Artist Concept
This artist's concept of lightning distribution in Jupiter's northern hemisphere incorporates a JunoCam image with artistic embellishments. Data from NASA's Juno mission indicates that most of the lightning activity on Jupiter is near its poles.   https://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA22474
Artist's Concept of Jupiter Lightning
An artist's concept of InSight's heat probe, called the Heat and Physical Properties Package (HP3), annotates various parts inside of the instrument.  https://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA23045
HP3 Cutaway Rendering (Artist's Concept)
Artist concept of the Deep Space 1 spacecraft from December, 2002.  http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA04242
Artist Concept of Deep Space 1
An artist concept depicting one of NASA's twin Voyager spacecraft. Humanity's farthest and longest-lived spacecraft are celebrating 40 years in August and September 2017.  https://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA21839
Voyager in Deep Space (Artist Concept)
This artist's concept shows the Lunar Flashlight spacecraft, a six-unit CubeSat designed to search for ice on the Moon's surface using special lasers.  The spacecraft will use its near-infrared lasers to shine light into shaded polar regions on the Moon, while an onboard reflectometer will measure surface reflection and composition.  https://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA23131
Lunar Flashlight (Artist's Concept)
This artist's concept depicts an aerial view of what the Jezero Crater area of Mars may have looked like billions of years ago.  https://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA22907
Lake Jezero (Artist's Concept)
Artist concept of Next Generation Space Telescope from December, 2002.  http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA04243
Artist Concept of Next Generation Space Telescope
Artist concept of the Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment GRACE from December 2002.  http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA04236
Artist Concept of Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment
This artist's concept shows what exoplanet Kepler-1649c could look like on its surface. The planet is the closest to Earth in size and temperature found yet in data from the Kepler space telescope.  https://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA23690
Kepler Planet 1649c Surface View Artist's Concept
This artist's concept shows Surrogate, a robot that could one day assist in disasters or hazardous situations such as a dangerous chemical laboratory.  Surrogate was designed and built at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California. Its components came from RoboSimian, another JPL-built robot designed for disaster relief and mitigation (see PIA19313). Surrogate rolls on a track rather than moving on its limbs.  http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA19314
Surrogate Poster Artist Concept
Artists concept of NASA Asteroid Redirect Robotic ARM Mission capturing an asteroid boulder before redirecting it to a astronaut-accessible orbit around Earth moon.  http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA19349
NASA Asteroid Redirect Robotic Mission Artist Concept
This artist concept shows NASA Dawn spacecraft above dwarf planet Ceres, as seen in images from the mission.  http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA19598
Dawn Fires Its Engine Above Ceres Artist Concept
This artist's concept, updated as of June 2020, depicts NASA's Psyche spacecraft. Set to launch in August 2022, the Psyche mission will explore a metal-rich asteroid of the same name that lies in the main asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter. The spacecraft will arrive in early 2026 and orbit the asteroid for nearly two years to investigate its composition.  Scientists think that Psyche, unlike most other asteroids that are rocky or icy bodies, is made up of mostly iron and nickel — similar to the Earth's core. The Psyche team will use a magnetometer to measure the asteroid's magnetic field. A multispectral imager will capture images of the surface, as well as data about the Psyche's composition and topography. Spectrometers will analyze the neutrons and gamma rays coming from the surface to reveal the elements that make up the asteroid itself.   https://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA23875
Psyche Spacecraft (Artist's Concept)
An artist's concept portrays a NASA Mars Exploration Rover on the surface of Mars. Two rovers, Spirit and Opportunity, will reach Mars in January 2004. Each has the mobility and toolkit to function as a robotic geologist.  http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA04928
Mars Exploration Rover, Vertical Artist Concept
This artist's concept shows RoboSimian, a robot intended to assist with disaster relief and mitigation.  RoboSimian is an ape-like robot that moves around on four limbs. It was designed and built at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California. It will compete in the 2015 DARPA Robotics Challenge Finals. To get the robot in shape for the contest, researchers at JPL are collaborating with partners at University of California, Santa Barbara, and the California Institute of Technology.  http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA19313
RoboSimian Disaster Relief Poster Artist Concept
The European Space Agency Mars Express spacecraft is depicted in orbit around Mars in this artist concept illustration.  The spacecraft was launched June 2, 2003, from Baikonur, Kazakhstan, on a journey to arrive at Mars in December 2003.  http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA04802
Mars Express, Artist Concept
This artist's concept shows a hypothetical planet covered in water around the binary star system of Kepler-35A and B.  In a 2017 study in the journal Nature Communications, researchers investigating the climates of exoplanets determined that this hypothetical planet could be habitable, depending on its distance from the two stars. On the far edge of the habitable zone, the hypothetical water-covered planet would have a lot of variation in its surface temperatures. But closer to the stars, near the inner edge of the habitable zone, the global average surface temperatures on the same planet would stay almost constant.  https://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA21470
Water World Artist Concept
Just how dim is the sunlight on Pluto, some three billion miles away? This artist concept of the frosty surface of Pluto with Charon and our sun as backdrops illustrates that while sunlight is much weaker than it is here on Earth, it isnt as dark as you might expect.  http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA19682
Pluto at High Noon Artist Concept
This artist's concept depicts astronauts and human habitats on Mars. NASA's Mars 2020 rover will carry a number of technologies that could make Mars safer and easier to explore for humans.  https://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA23302
First Humans on Mars (Artist's Concept)
This artist's concept depicts the 140-mile-wide (226-kilometer-wide) asteroid Psyche, which lies in the main asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter. Psyche is the focal point of NASA's mission of the same name. The Psyche spacecraft is set to launch in August 2022 and arrive at the asteroid in 2026, where it will orbit for 21 months and investigate its composition.  Scientists think that Psyche, unlike most other asteroids that are rocky or icy bodies, is made up of mostly iron and nickel — similar to the Earth's core. Exploring the asteroid could give valuable insight into how our own planet and others formed. The Psyche team will use a magnetometer to measure the asteroid's magnetic field. A multispectral imager will capture images of the surface, as well as data about the Psyche's composition and topography. Spectrometers will analyze the neutrons and gamma rays coming from the surface to reveal the elements that make up the asteroid itself.  https://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA23876
A Metal-Rich World (Artist's Concept)
Artist's concept of a dust storm on Titan. Researchers believe that huge amounts of dust can be raised on Titan, Saturn's largest moon, by strong wind gusts that arise in powerful methane storms. Such methane storms, previously observed in images from the international Cassini spacecraft, can form above dune fields that cover the equatorial regions of this moon especially around the equinox, the time of the year when the Sun crosses the equator.  The Cassini spacecraft ended its mission on Sept. 15, 2017.  https://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA22482
Dust Storms Raised by Strong Winds on Titan (Artist's Concept)
This artist concept shows the Mars Helicopter, a small, autonomous rotorcraft, which will travel with NASA's Mars 2020 rover mission, currently scheduled to launch in July 2020, to demonstrate the viability and potential of heavier-than-air vehicles on the Red Planet.  https://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA22460
Mars Helicopter (Artist's Concept)
In this artist's concept, a two-stage United Launch Alliance (ULA) Atlas V launch vehicle speeds the Mars 2020 spacecraft toward the Red Planet. The rocket stands at 197 feet (60 meters) tall.  This will be the 11th Mars launch on an Atlas rocket and the fifth by the Atlas V following NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter in 2005, Curiosity rover in 2011, MAVEN orbiter in 2013 and InSight lander in 2018.  Charged with returning astronauts to the Moon by 2024, NASA will establish a sustained human presence on and around the Moon by 2028 through NASA's Artemis lunar exploration plans.  https://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA23922
Rocket to Mars (Artist's Concept)
In February 2021, NASA's Mars 2020 Perseverance rover and NASA's Ingenuity Mars Helicopter (shown in an artist's concept) will be the agency's two newest explorers on Mars. Both were named by students as part of an essay contest.  Perseverance is the most sophisticated rover NASA has ever sent to Mars. Ingenuity, a technology experiment, will be the first aircraft to attempt controlled flight on another planet. Perseverance will arrive at Mars' Jezero Crater with Ingenuity attached to its belly.  https://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA23962
Portrait of Perseverance and Ingenuity (Artist's Concept)
An artist's concept of the Magellan spacecraft making a radar map of Venus.  Magellan mapped 98 percent of Venus' surface at a resolution of 100 to 150 meters (about the length of a football or soccer field), using synthetic aperture radar, a technique that simulates the use of a much larger radar antenna. It found that 85 percent of the surface is covered with volcanic flows and showed evidence of tectonic movement, turbulent surface winds, lava channels and pancake-shaped domes. Magellan also produced high-resolution gravity data for 95 percent of the planet and tested a new maneuvering technique called aerobraking, using atmospheric drag to adjust its orbit.  The spacecraft was commanded to plunge into Venus' atmosphere in 1994 as part of a final experiment to gather atmospheric data.   http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA18175
Magellan Orbit Artist Concept
This artist's concept shows a black hole with an accretion disk -- a flat structure of material orbiting the black hole -- and a jet of hot gas, called plasma.  Using NASA's NuSTAR space telescope and a fast camera called ULTRACAM on the William Herschel Observatory in La Palma, Spain, scientists have been able to measure the distance that particles in jets travel before they "turn on" and become bright sources of light. This distance is called the "acceleration zone."  https://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA22085
Black Hole With Jet (Artist's Concept)
This artist's concept illustrates one possible answer to the puzzle of the "giant galactic blobs." These blobs (red), first identified about five years ago, are mammoth clouds of intensely glowing material that surround distant galaxies (white). Astronomers using visible-light telescopes can see the glow of the blobs, but they didn't know what provides the energy to light them up. NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope set its infrared eyes on one well-known blob located 11 billion light-years away, and discovered three tremendously bright galaxies, each shining with the light of more than one trillion Suns, headed toward each other.      Spitzer also observed three other blobs in the same galactic neighborhood and found equally bright galaxies within them. One of these blobs is also known to contain galaxies merging together. The findings suggest that galactic mergers might be the mysterious source of blobs.      If so, then one explanation for how mergers produce such large clouds of material is that they trigger intense bursts of star formation. This star formation would lead to exploding massive stars, or supernovae, which would then shoot gases outward in a phenomenon known as superwinds. Blobs produced in this fashion are illustrated in this artist's concept.  http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA07221
At the Heart of Blobs Artist Concept
Atmosphere on Enceladus Artist Concept
Atmosphere on Enceladus Artist Concept
Saturn Rings Artist Concept
Saturn Rings Artist Concept
Artist Concept of Rhea Rings
Artist Concept of Rhea Rings
This artist's concept shows a view from above the Lunar Flashlight spacecraft, a six-unit CubeSat designed to search for ice on the Moon's surface using special lasers.  The spacecraft uses its near-infrared lasers to shine light into shaded polar regions on the Moon, while an on-board reflectometer measures surface reflection and composition.  https://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA23132
Lunar Flashlight from Above (Artist's Concept)
NASA's Mars 2020 Project will re-use the basic engineering of NASA's Mars Science Laboratory/Curiosity to send a different rover to Mars, with new objectives and instruments. This artist's concept depicts the top of the 2020 rover's mast.  http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA20760
NASA to Launch Mars Rover in 2020 Artist Concept
Created using data collected by the JunoCam imager aboard NASA's Juno spacecraft, this animation is an artist's concept that shows a view of a mountain on the Jovian moon Io. The data was recorded during close flybys of the moon in December 2023 and February 2024. The mountain, which the Juno science team has nicknamed "Steeple Mountain," is between 3 and 4.3 miles (5 and 7 kilometers) in height.  One side of Steeple Mountain is in shade in the animation because only one side of the mountain was illuminated when imaged by JunoCam.  Animation available at https://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA26294
Io's 'Steeple Mountain' (Artist's Concept)
Artist's concept of the New Horizons spacecraft flying by a possible binary 2014 MU69 on Jan. 1, 2019. Early observations of MU69 hint at the Kuiper Belt object being either a binary orbiting pair or a contact (stuck together) pair of nearly like-sized bodies with diameters near 20 and 18 kilometers (12 and 11 miles).   https://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA21943
Artist Concept: Flying by a 2014 MU69
NASA Aqua satellite carries six state-of-the-art instruments in a near-polar low-Earth orbit. Aqua is seen in this artist concept orbiting Earth. The six instruments are the Atmospheric Infrared Sounder (AIRS), the Advanced Microwave Sounding Unit (AMSU-A), the Humidity Sounder for Brazil (HSB), the Advanced Microwave Scanning Radiometer for EOS (AMSR-E), the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS), and Clouds and the Earth's Radiant Energy System (CERES). Each has unique characteristics and capabilities, and all six serve together to form a powerful package for Earth observations.  http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA18156
Aqua Satellite Orbiting Earth Artist Concept
Created using data collected by the JunoCam imager aboard NASA's Juno spacecraft, this animation is an artist's concept that shows an aerial view of Loki Patera, a lava lake on the Jovian moon Io. The 124-mile-long (200-kilometer-long) lake is filled with magma, rimmed with hot lava, and dotted with islands. Loki provided a spectacular reflection when imaged by JunoCam during flybys of the moon in December 2023 and February 2024, suggesting it and other parts of Io's surface are as smooth as glass.  The large island in Loki Patera does not have a name.  Animation available at https://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA26293
Looking Into Io's Loki Patera (Artist's Concept)
This artist's concept depicts "heartbeat stars," which have been detected by NASA's Kepler Space Telescope and others.  The illustration shows two heartbeat stars swerving close to one another in their closest approach along their highly elongated orbits around one another. The mutual gravitation of the two stars would cause the stars themselves to become slightly ellipsoidal in shape.  A third, more distant star in the system is shown in the upper left. Astronomers speculate that such unseen companions may exist in some of these heartbeat star systems, and could be responsible for maintaining these oddly stretched-out orbits.  The overlaid curve depicts the inferred cyclic change in velocities in one such system, called KIC 9965691, looking something like the graph of an electrocardiogram (hence the name "heartbeat stars"). The solid points represent measurements made by the HIRES instrument at the W.M. Keck Observatory, and the curve is the best fit model for the motions of this system.  http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA21075
Heartbeat Stars Artist Concept
This artist's concept shows what the weather might look like on cool star-like bodies known as brown dwarfs. These giant balls of gas start out life like stars, but lack the mass to sustain nuclear fusion at their cores, and instead, fade and cool with time.  Observations from NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope suggest that most brown dwarfs are roiling with one or more planet-size storms akin to Jupiter's "Great Red Spot."  https://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA21475
Brown Dwarf Weather (Artist's Concept)
An artist concept of the Ocean Surface Topography Mission/Jason 2 Earth satellite.  The Ocean Surface Topography Mission/Jason 2 is an Earth satellite designed to make observations of ocean topography for investigations into sea-level rise and the relationship between ocean circulation and climate change. The satellite also provides data on the forces behind such large-scale climate phenomena as El Niño and La Niña.  The mission is a follow-on to the French-American Jason 1 mission, which began collecting data on sea-surface levels in 1992.  http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA18158
Ocean Surface Topography Mission/Jason 2 Artist Concept
This artist's concept from August 2015 depicts NASA's InSight Mars lander fully deployed for studying the deep interior of Mars. This illustration updates the correct placement and look of Insight's main instruments. For an earlier artist rendition, see PIA17358.  InSight, short for Interior Exploration using Seismic Investigations, Geodesy and Heat Transport, will investigate processes that formed and shaped Mars. Its findings will improve understanding about the evolution of our inner solar system's rocky planets, including Earth.  The lander will be the first mission to permanently deploy instruments directly onto Martian ground using a robotic arm. The two instruments to be placed into a work area in front of the lander are a seismometer (contributed by the French space agency Centre National d'Études Spatiales, or CNES) to measure the microscopic ground motions from distant marsquakes providing information about the interior structure of Mars, and a heat-flow probe (contributed by the German Aerospace Center, or DLR) designed to hammer itself 3 to 5 meters (about 16 feet) deep and monitor heat coming from the planet's interior. The mission will also track the lander's radio to measure wobbles in the planet's rotation that relate to the size of its core and a suite of environmental sensors to monitor the weather and variations in the magnetic field. Two cameras will aid in instrument deployment and monitoring the local environment.  Note: After thorough examination, NASA managers have decided to suspend the planned March 2016 launch of the Interior Exploration using Seismic Investigations Geodesy and Heat Transport (InSight) mission. The decision follows unsuccessful attempts to repair a leak in a section of the prime instrument in the science payload.  http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA19811
Artist Concept of InSight Lander on Mars
This artist's concept shows NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope. Spitzer begins its "Beyond" mission phase on Oct. 1, 2016. Spitzer is depicted in the orientation it assumes to establish communications with ground stations.  Spitzer is over 130 million miles (210 million kilometers) away from Earth, or about 1.5 times the distance between Earth and the Sun. The selected research proposals for Spitzer's Beyond phase include a variety of objects that the mission was not originally planned to address -- such as galaxies in the early universe, the black hole at the center of the Milky Way and exoplanets.  Spitzer faces increasing challenges and risks in its Beyond phase. To enable this riskier mode of operations, the mission team will have to override some autonomous safety systems. Mission engineers are hard at work preparing for these new challenges.  http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA20913
Spitzer Beyond Artist Concept
This artist's-concept illustration depicts the spacecraft of NASA's Psyche mission near the mission's target, the metal asteroid Psyche. The artwork was created in May 2017 to show the five-panel solar arrays planned for the spacecraft.      The spacecraft's structure will include power and propulsion systems to travel to, and orbit, the asteroid. These systems will combine solar power with electric propulsion to carry the scientific instruments used to study the asteroid through space.      The mission plans launch in 2022 and arrival at Psyche, between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter, in 2026. This selected asteroid is made almost entirely of nickel-iron metal. It offers evidence about violent collisions that created Earth and other terrestrial planets.   https://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA21499
Artist's Concept of Psyche Spacecraft with Five-Panel Array
When NASA's Ingenuity Mars Helicopter attempts its first test flight on the Red Planet, the agency's Mars 2020 Perseverance rover will be close by, as seen in this artist's concept.  Ingenuity, a technology experiment, will be the first aircraft to attempt controlled flight on another planet. When it attempts its test flights on Mars in spring 2021, Ingenuity will remain within a 0.6-mile (1-kilometer) radius of Perseverance so it can communicate wirelessly with the rover. Perseverance then communicates with relay orbiters around Mars that send the signal back to Earth.  https://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA23963
A Mars Rover and a Mars Flyer (Artist's Concept)
This artist's concept shows a brown dwarf, an object that is at least 13 times the mass of Jupiter but not massive enough to begin nuclear fusion in its core, which is the defining characteristic of a star. Scientist using NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope recently made the first ever direct measurement of wind on a brown dwarf.  https://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA23684
Spitzer Brown Dwarf Wind (Artist's Concept)
This artist's concept animation shows a brown dwarf with bands of clouds, thought to resemble those seen on Neptune and the other outer planets in the solar system.  By using NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope, astronomers have found that the varying glow of brown dwarfs over time can be explained by bands of patchy clouds rotating at different speeds.   Videos are available at https://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA21752
Brown Dwarf Weather (Artist's Concept)
Artist's concept of Kuiper Belt object 2014 MU69, which is the next flyby target for NASA's New Horizons mission. Scientists speculate that the Kuiper Belt object could be a single body (above) with a large chunk taken out of it, or two bodies that are close together or even touching.  https://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA21868
Artist's Concept of 2014 MU69 as a Single Object
This artist's concept shows NASA's InSight lander with its instruments deployed on the Martian surface. InSight's package of weather sensors, called the Auxiliary Payload Subsystem (APSS), includes an air pressure sensor inside the lander -- its inlet is visible on InSight's deck -- and two air temperature and wind sensors on the deck. Under the deck's edge is a magnetometer, provided by UCLA, to measure changes in the local magnetic field that could also influence SEIS.  InSight's air temperature and wind sensors are actually refurbished spares built for Curiosity's Rover Environmental Monitoring Station (REMS). Called Temperature and Wind for InSight, or TWINS, these two east- and west-facing booms sit on the lander's deck and were provided by Spain's Centro de Astrobiología (CAB).  https://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA22957
InSight Collecting Mars Weather Data (Artist's Concept)
Artist Concept of Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter
Artist Concept of Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter
Huygens Descent Sequence Artist Concept
Huygens Descent Sequence Artist Concept
Comet Impact Into Jupiter Artist Concept
Comet Impact Into Jupiter Artist Concept
Artist’s concept of the Orbiting Carbon Observatory.
Artist Concept of the Orbiting Carbon Observatory
The European Space Agency's Mars Express spacecraft is depicted in orbit around Mars in this artist's concept stereo illustration.  The spacecraft was launched June 2, 2003, from Baikonur, Kazakhstan, on a journey to arrive at Mars in December 2003.  This red-blue anaglyph artwork can be viewed in 3-D on your computer monitor or in color print form by wearing red-blue (cyan) 3-D glasses.  http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA04803
Mars Express, 3-D Artist Concept
This artist's rendering illustrates a conceptual design for a potential future mission to land a robotic probe on the surface of Jupiter's moon Europa.  The lander is shown with a sampling arm extended, having previously excavated a small area on the surface.  The circular dish on top is a dual-purpose high-gain antenna and camera mast, with stereo imaging cameras mounted on the back of the antenna.  Three vertical shapes located around the top center of the lander are attachment points for cables that would lower the rover from a sky crane, which is envisioned as the landing system for this mission concept.  http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA21048
Europa Lander Mission Concept (Artist Rendering)
This artist's concept of a lake at the north pole of Saturn's moon Titan illustrates raised rims and rampartlike features such as those seen by NASA's Cassini spacecraft around the moon's Winnipeg Lacus. New research using Cassini radar data and modeling proposes that lake basins like these are likely explosion craters, which could have formed when liquid molecular nitrogen deposits within the crust warmed and quickly turned to vapor, blowing holes in the moon's crust. This would have happened during a warming event (or events) that occurred in a colder, nitrogen-dominated period in Titan's past. The new research may provide evidence of these cold periods in Titan's past, followed by a relative warming to conditions like those of today. Although Titan is frigid compared to Earth, methane in the atmosphere provides a greenhouse effect that warms the moon's surface.  https://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA23172
Titan's Rimmed Lakes (Artist's Concept)
An artist's concept illustrates the positions of the Voyager spacecraft in relation to structures formed around our Sun by the solar wind. Also illustrated is the termination shock, a violent region the spacecraft must pass through before reaching the outer limits of the solar system. At the termination shock, the supersonic solar wind abruptly slows from an average speed of 400 kilometers per second to less than 100 kilometer per second (900,000 to less than 225,000 miles per hour). Beyond the termination shock is the solar system's final frontier, the heliosheath, a vast region where the turbulent and hot solar wind is compressed as it presses outward against the interstellar wind that is beyond the heliopause. A bow shock likely forms as the interstellar wind approaches and is deflected around the heliosphere, forcing it into a teardrop-shaped structure with a long, comet-like tail.  The exact location of the termination shock is unknown, and it originally was thought to be closer to the Sun than Voyager 1 currently is. As Voyager 1 cruised ever farther from the Sun, it confirmed that all the planets are inside an immense bubble blown by the solar wind and the termination shock was much more distant.  http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA04927
Voyager Approaches Final Frontier Artist Concept
This artist concept shows K2-138, the first multi-planet system discovered by citizen scientists. The central star is slightly smaller and cooler than our Sun. The five known planets are all between the size of Earth and Neptune. Planet b may potentially be rocky, but planets c, d, e, and f likely contain large amounts of ice and gas. All five planets have orbital periods shorter than 13 days and are all incredibly hot, ranging from 800 to 1,800 degrees Fahrenheit.  https://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA22088
Kepler K2-138 System (Artist's Concept)
This artist's concept depicts NASA's Mars 2020 rover on the surface of Mars.  The mission takes the next step by not only seeking signs of habitable conditions on Mars in the ancient past, but also searching for signs of past microbial life itself.  The Mars 2020 rover introduces a drill that can collect core samples of the most promising rocks and soils and set them aside on the surface of Mars. A future mission could potentially return these samples to Earth.  Mars 2020 is targeted for launch in July/August 2020 aboard an Atlas V 541 rocket from Space Launch Complex 41 at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida.   https://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA21635
NASA's Mars 2020 Rover Artist's Concept #1
Scientists using data from NASA's Kepler mission have confirmed the first near-Earth-size planet orbiting in the habitable zone of a sun-like star. The habitable zone is the region around a star where temperatures are just right for water to exist in its liquid form.  The artist's concept compares Earth (left) to the new planet, called Kepler-452b, which is about 60 percent larger. The illustration represents one possible appearance for Kepler-452b -- scientists do not know whether the planet has oceans and continents like Earth.  Both planets orbit a G2-type star of about the same temperature; however, the star hosting Kepler-452b is 6 billion years old, 1.5 billion years older than our sun. As stars age, they become larger, hotter and brighter, as represented in the illustration. Kepler-452b's star appears a bit larger and brighter.   http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA19825
Earth Bigger, Older Cousin Artist Concept
This artist concept shows NASA Kepler spacecraft.
Kepler in Space Artist Concept
This artist concept shows NASA Kepler spacecraft.
Kepler Spacecraft Artist Concept
In this artist's concept, NASA's Ingenuity Mars Helicopter stands on the Red Planet's surface as NASA's Mars 2020 Perseverance rover (partially visible on the left) rolls away.  Ingenuity, a technology experiment, will be the first aircraft to attempt controlled flight on another planet. It will arrive on Mars on Feb. 18, 2021, attached to the belly of NASA's Perseverance rover. Perseverance will deploy Ingenuity onto the surface of Mars, and Ingenuity is expected to attempt its first flight test in spring 2021.  https://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA23720
Ingenuity Mars Helicopter on the Martian Surface (Artist's Concept)
An artist's concept of a tidal disruption event (TDE) that happens when a star passes fatally close to a supermassive black hole, which reacts by launching a relativistic jet.   https://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA22355
Black Hole vs. Star: A Tidal Disruption Event (Artist's Concept)
This artist concept depicts a distant hypothetical solar system, similar in age to our own. Looking inward from the system outer fringes, a ring of dusty debris can be seen, and within it, planets circling a star the size of our Sun.  This debris is all that remains of the planet-forming disk from which the planets evolved. Planets are formed when dusty material in a large disk surrounding a young star clumps together. Leftover material is eventually blown out by solar wind or pushed out by gravitational interactions with planets. Billions of years later, only an outer disk of debris remains.  These outer debris disks are too faint to be imaged by visible-light telescopes. They are washed out by the glare of the Sun. However, NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope can detect their heat, or excess thermal emission, in infrared light. This allows astronomers to study the aftermath of planet building in distant solar systems like our own.  http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA07096
A Distant Solar System Artist Concept
This is one artist's concept of Kuiper Belt object 2014 MU69, the next flyby target for NASA's New Horizons mission. This binary concept is based on telescope observations made at Patagonia, Argentina, on July 17, 2017, when MU69 passed in front of a star. New Horizons scientists theorize that it could be a single body with a large chunk taken out of it, or two bodies that are close together or even touching.  https://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA21867
A Kuiper Belt Pair? Artist's Concept of 2014 MU69 as a Binary Object
This animated artist's concept depicts three small rovers – part of NASA's CADRE (Cooperative Autonomous Distributed Robotic Exploration) technology demonstration headed for the Moon – driving together on the lunar surface. Motiv Space Systems in Pasadena, California, created the rendering and collaborated with NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory on critical rover and mobility functions.  Slated to arrive aboard a lunar lander at the Reiner Gamma region of the Moon under NASA's CLPS (Commercial Lunar Payload Services) initiative, CADRE is designed to demonstrate that multiple robots can cooperate and explore together autonomously – without direct input from human mission controllers.  A trio of the miniature solar-powered rovers, each about the size of a carry-on suitcase, will explore the Moon as a team, communicating via radio with each other and a base station aboard the lander. By taking simultaneous measurements from multiple locations, CADRE will also demonstrate how multirobot missions can record data impossible for a single robot to achieve – a tantalizing prospect for future missions.  Motiv contributed subsystems and hardware elements for three of four CADRE systems, including designing and building the mobility system and rover chassis, the base station, the rover deployers, and the motor controller boards. The company also procured and tested the actuators with the flight motor controller boards.  Animation available at https://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA26296
CADRE Rovers Explore the Moon Together (Artist's Concept)
This artist's concept depicts the stationary NASA Mars lander known by the acronym InSight at work studying the interior of Mars. The InSight mission (for Interior Exploration using Seismic Investigations, Geodesy and Heat Transport) is scheduled to launch in March 2016 and land on Mars six months later. It will investigate processes that formed and shaped Mars and will help scientists better understand the evolution of our inner solar system's rocky planets, including Earth.  InSight will deploy two instruments to the ground using a robotic arm: a seismometer (contributed by the French space agency Centre National d'Etudes Spatiales, or CNES) to measure the microscopic ground motions from distant marsquakes, providing detailed information about the interior structure of Mars; and a heat-flow probe (contributed by the German Aerospace Center, or DLR) designed to hammer itself 3 to 5 meters (about 16 feet) deep and monitor heat coming from the planet's interior. The mission will also track the lander's radio to measure wobbles in the planet's rotation that relate to the size of its core and will include a camera and a suite of environmental sensors to monitor the weather and variations in the magnetic field. Lockheed Martin Space Systems, Denver, is building the spacecraft.   Note: After thorough examination, NASA managers have decided to suspend the planned March 2016 launch of the Interior Exploration using Seismic Investigations Geodesy and Heat Transport (InSight) mission. The decision follows unsuccessful attempts to repair a leak in a section of the prime instrument in the science payload.  http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA17358
Artist Concept of InSight Lander on Mars
This artist's concept shows a close-up of NASA's Mars 2020 rover studying an outcrop.  The mission will not only seek out and study an area likely to have been habitable in the distant past, but it will take the next, bold step in robotic exploration of the Red Planet by seeking signs of past microbial life itself.  Mars 2020 will use powerful instruments to investigate rocks on Mars down to the microscopic scale of variations in texture and composition. It will also acquire and store samples of the most promising rocks and soils that it encounters, and set them aside on the surface of Mars. A future mission could potentially return these samples to Earth.  Mars 2020 is targeted for launch in July/August 2020 aboard an Atlas V-541 rocket from Space Launch Complex 41 at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida.   https://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA22108
NASA's Mars 2020 Rover Artist's Concept #5
This artist's concept depicts NASA's Mars 2020 rover exploring Mars.  The mission will not only seek out and study an area likely to have been habitable in the distant past, but it will take the next, bold step in robotic exploration of the Red Planet by seeking signs of past microbial life itself.  Mars 2020 will use powerful instruments to investigate rocks on Mars down to the microscopic scale of variations in texture and composition. It will also acquire and store samples of the most promising rocks and soils that it encounters, and set them aside on the surface of Mars. A future mission could potentially return these samples to Earth.  Mars 2020 is targeted for launch in July/August 2020 aboard an Atlas V-541 rocket from Space Launch Complex 41 at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida.   https://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA22107
NASA's Mars 2020 Rover Artist's Concept #4
NASA's Mars 2020 rover looks at the horizon in this artist's concept.  The mission will not only seek out and study an area likely to have been habitable in the distant past, but it will take the next, bold step in robotic exploration of the Red Planet by seeking signs of past microbial life itself.  Mars 2020 will use powerful instruments to investigate rocks on Mars down to the microscopic scale of variations in texture and composition. It will also acquire and store samples of the most promising rocks and soils that it encounters, and set them aside on the surface of Mars. A future mission could potentially return these samples to Earth.  Mars 2020 is targeted for launch in July/August 2020 aboard an Atlas V-541 rocket from Space Launch Complex 41 at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida.   https://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA22110
NASA's Mars 2020 Rover Artist's Concept #7
This artist's concept summarizes our understanding of how the inside of Ceres could be structured, based on the data returned by the NASA's Dawn mission.  Using information about Ceres' gravity and topography, scientists found that Ceres is "differentiated," which means that it has compositionally distinct layers at different depths. The most internal layer, the "mantle" is dominated by hydrated rocks, like clays. The external layer, the 24.85-mile (40-kilometer) thick crust, is a mixture of ice, salts, and hydrated minerals. Between the two is a layer that may contain a little bit of liquid rich in salts, called brine. It extends down at least 62 miles (100 kilometers). The Dawn observations cannot "see" below about 62 miles (100 kilometers) in depth. Hence, it is not possible to tell if Ceres' deep interior contains more liquid or a core of dense material rich in metal.  https://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA22660
Ceres' Internal Structure (Artist's Concept)
This image is an artist concept of the Orbiting Carbon Observatory OCO.
Artist Concept of the Orbiting Carbon Observatory
This image is an artist’s concept of the Orbiting Carbon Observatory
Artist Concept of the Orbiting Carbon Observatory
NASA's Polar Radiant Energy in the Far-InfraRed Experiment (PREFIRE) mission will measure the amount of heat Earth emits into space from two of the coldest, most remote regions on the planet. Data from the mission will improve computer models researchers use to predict how Earth's ice, seas, and weather will change in a warming world. This artist's concept depicts one of two PREFIRE CubeSats in orbit around Earth.  Earth absorbs a lot of the Sun's energy at the tropics, and weather and ocean currents transport that heat to the poles. Ice, snow, clouds, and other parts of the polar environment emit the heat into space, much of it in the form of far-infrared radiation. The difference between how much heat Earth absorbs at the tropics and then radiates out to space from the Arctic and Antarctic determines the planet's temperature and drives a dynamic system of climate and weather.  But far-infrared emissions at the poles have never been systematically measured. This is where PREFIRE comes in. The mission will help researchers gain a clearer understanding of when and where Earth's poles emit far-infrared radiation, as well as how atmospheric water vapor and clouds influence the amount that escapes to space.  PREFIRE is composed of two roughly shoebox-size CubeSats outfitted with specialized miniature heat sensors that will give researchers a more accurate picture of how much heat Earth emits into space.  https://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA26185
PREFIRE CubeSat in Earth Orbit (Artist's Concept)
A newly discovered exoplanet, Kepler-452b, comes the closest of any found so far to matching our Earth-sun system. This artist's conception of a planetary lineup shows habitable-zone planets with similarities to Earth: from left, Kepler-22b, Kepler-69c, the just announced Kepler-452b, Kepler-62f and Kepler-186f. Last in line is Earth itself.  http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA19830
Pantheon of Planets Similar to Earth Artist Concept
This artist's concept shows planet KELT-9b orbiting its host star, KELT-9. It is the hottest gas giant planet discovered so far.  With a dayside temperature of more than 7,800 degrees Fahrenheit (4,600 Kelvin), KELT-9b is a planet that is hotter than most stars. But its star, called KELT-9, is even hotter -- a blue A-type star that is likely unraveling the planet through evaporation.  KELT-9b is a gas giant 2.8 times more massive than Jupiter, but only half as dense. Scientists would expect the planet to have a smaller radius, but the extreme radiation from its host star has caused the planet's atmosphere to puff up like a balloon.  The planet is also unusual in that it orbits perpendicular to the spin axis of the star. That would be analogous to the planet orbiting perpendicular to the plane of our solar system. One "year" on this planet is less than two days long.  The KELT-9 star is only 300 million years old, which is young in star time. It is more than twice as large, and nearly twice as hot, as our sun. Given that the planet's atmosphere is constantly blasted with high levels of ultraviolet radiation, the planet may even be shedding a tail of evaporated planetary material like a comet.  An animation is available at https://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA21472
Hottest Hot Jupiter Animation (Artist's Concept)
This artist's concept depicts NASA's InSight lander after it has deployed its instruments on the Martian surface.  https://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA22743
InSight Deploys Its Instruments
Planets having atmospheres rich in helium may be common in our galaxy, according to a new theory based on data from NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope. These planets would be around the mass of Neptune, or lighter, and would orbit close to their stars, basking in their searing heat. According to the new theory, radiation from the stars would boil off hydrogen in the planets' atmospheres. Both hydrogen and helium are common ingredients of gas planets like these. Hydrogen is lighter than helium and thus more likely to escape.  After billions of years of losing hydrogen, the planet's atmosphere would become enriched with helium. Scientists predict the planets would appear covered in white or gray clouds.  This is in contrast to our own Neptune, which is blue due to the presence of methane. Methane absorbs the color red, leaving blue. Neptune is far from our sun and hasn't lost its hydrogen. The hydrogen bonds with carbon to form methane.  This artist's concept depicts a proposed helium-atmosphere planet called GJ 436b, which was found by Spitzer to lack in methane -- a first clue about its lack of hydrogen. The planet orbits every 2.6 days around its star, which is cooler than our sun and thus appears more yellow-orange in color.  http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA19344
Helium-Shrouded Planets Artist Concept
This artist concept illustrates how a massive collision of objects perhaps as large as the planet Pluto smashed together to create the dust ring around the nearby star Vega. New observations from NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope indicate the collision took place within the last one million years. Astronomers think that embryonic planets smashed together, shattered into pieces, and repeatedly crashed into other fragments to create ever finer debris.      In the image, a collision is seen between massive objects that measured up to 2,000 kilometers (about 1,200 miles) in diameter. Scientists say the big collision initiated subsequent collisions that created dust particles around the star that were a few microns in size. Vega's intense light blew these fine particles to larger distances from the star, and also warmed them to emit heat radiation that can be detected by Spitzer's infrared detectors.  http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA07217
Massive Smash-up at Vega Artist Concept
This artist concept shows NASA Voyager spacecraft against a backdrop of stars.
Voyager in Space Artist Concept
This artist concept of NASA Voyager spacecraft with its antennapointing to Earth.
Artist Concept of Voyager
The InSight spacecraft approaches Mars in this artist's concept.  Interior Exploration using Seismic Investigations, Geodesy and Heat Transport, or InSight, is a Mars lander that probes the planet's deep interior to shed light on the evolution of Mars and the rocky planets of the solar system.  There are six phases in the InSight mission: Pre-Launch, Launch, Cruise, Approach, Landing and Surface Operations. The approach phase begins about 60 days before the spacecraft enters the Martian atmosphere and prepares the spacecraft for landing.  https://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA22099
InSight Approaching Mars
Artist concept of Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer. A new NASA mission will scan the entire sky in infrared light in search of nearby cool stars, planetary construction zones and the brightest galaxies in the universe.  http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA06927
Artist Concept of Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer WISE
This artist's concept puts solar system distances -- and the travels of NASA's Voyager 2 spacecraft -- in perspective. The scale bar is in astronomical units, with each set distance beyond 1 AU representing 10 times the previous distance. One AU is the distance from the Sun to Earth, which is about 93 million miles, or 150 million kilometers. Neptune, the most distant planet from the Sun, is about 30 AU.  Much of the solar system is actually in interstellar space. Informally, the term "solar system" is often used to mean the space out to the last planet. Scientific consensus, however, says the solar system goes out to the Oort Cloud, the source of the comets that swing by our sun on long time scales. Beyond the outer edge of the Oort Cloud, the gravity of other stars begins to dominate that of the Sun.  The inner edge of the main part of the Oort Cloud could be as close as 1,000 AU from our Sun. The outer edge is estimated to be around 100,000 AU.  Voyager 2, the second farthest human-made object after Voyager 1, is around 119 AU from the Sun. Indications from the scientific instruments suggest Voyager 2 passed beyond our heliosphere (the bubble of plasma the Sun blows around itself) and into interstellar space (the space between stars) in November 2018. The heliosphere has a turbulent outer boundary known as the heliosheath. The termination shock is the inner boundary of the heliosheath and the heliopause is the outer boundary, beyond which lies interstellar space. Voyager 2 crossed the termination shock at 84 AU in August 2007.  It will take about 300 years for Voyager 2 to reach the inner edge of the Oort Cloud and possibly about 30,000 years to fly beyond it.  Voyager 2 is heading away from the Sun about 36 degrees out of the ecliptic plane (plane of the planets) to the south, toward the constellations of Sagittarius and Pavo. In about 40,000 years, Voyager 2 will be closer to another star than our own Sun, coming within about 1.7 light years of a star called Ross 248, a small star in the constellation of Andromeda.  https://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA22921
Voyager 2 and the Scale of the Solar System (Artist Concept)
Artist concept of Earth reflection in Dawn spacecraft.
Earth Reflection in Dawn Spacecraft Artist Concept
Rainy Day at Hotei Arcus Artist Concept
Rainy Day at Hotei Arcus Artist Concept
Artist Concept of Particle Population in Saturn Magnetosphere
Artist Concept of Particle Population in Saturn Magnetosphere