Level 1 - Absolute Beginner
Jupiter is the biggest planet in our solar system. It has a very strong magnetic field. A magnetic field is like an invisible force around a planet.
NASA sent a spacecraft called Juno to study Jupiter. Juno has been flying around Jupiter and sending information back to Earth.
Juno found that Jupiter can make tiny particles called electrons move extremely fast. The electrons move at nearly the speed of light. That is the fastest speed possible in the universe.
Scientists found that this is similar to how very powerful cosmic rays are made in space. Cosmic rays are very fast particles that come from places far away in the universe, like exploding stars.
- planet
- a large round object that travels around a star; Earth is a planet that travels around the Sun
- spacecraft
- a vehicle designed to travel in outer space
- magnetic field
- an invisible area of force around a magnet or planet that affects how other magnetic objects move near it
- electron
- a very tiny particle with a negative electric charge that is part of every atom
- cosmic ray
- a very fast-moving particle that travels through space, often coming from exploding stars
- solar wind
- a stream of particles flowing outward from the Sun in all directions through space
- speed of light
- the fastest speed anything can travel in the universe, about 300,000 kilometres per second
- NASA
- the US government's space agency, responsible for space exploration and research
Level 2 - Elementary
NASA's Juno spacecraft, which has been orbiting Jupiter since 2016, has made an exciting new discovery about how high-energy particles are created in space. Scientists found that a turbulent zone near Jupiter called the 'foreshock' can accelerate electrons to nearly the speed of light. The findings were published in the science journal Nature.
The foreshock forms where Jupiter's powerful magnetic field pushes back against the solar wind -- the continuous stream of particles flowing out from the Sun. When the solar wind hits this invisible boundary, it creates a region of chaotic, turbulent energy that can give particles enormous speed.
Scientists found that the electrons Jupiter accelerates are even faster than those near Earth, because Jupiter's foreshock is much larger. The bigger the magnetic environment, the more powerful the particle accelerator becomes. This is consistent with what is seen around supernovae -- exploding stars -- which create the most powerful cosmic rays in the universe.
This discovery helps scientists understand one of the great mysteries of astronomy: where do cosmic rays come from? By studying how Jupiter's foreshock works, researchers now have strong evidence that the same type of process, operating at a much larger scale, could be responsible for the highest-energy particles anywhere in the universe.
- orbit
- to travel in a repeated path around a larger object such as a planet or star
- foreshock
- a turbulent region in space where a planet's magnetic field first meets and resists the flow of the solar wind
- accelerate
- to cause something to move faster
- turbulent
- characterised by chaotic, irregular motion with many unpredictable changes of speed and direction
- supernova
- a massive explosion that occurs when a large star reaches the end of its life, releasing enormous amounts of energy and particles
- boundary
- the dividing line or zone between two different regions or environments
- consistent
- matching or in agreement with what is already known or expected
- mystery
- something that is not yet fully understood or explained by science
Level 3 - Intermediate
A study published in Nature this week by a team of astrophysicists analysing data from NASA's Juno spacecraft has revealed that Jupiter's foreshock -- the turbulent transition zone upstream of the planet's bow shock where its magnetosphere first deflects the solar wind -- functions as a natural particle accelerator of extraordinary power. Instruments aboard Juno measured electrons in Jupiter's foreshock moving at relativistic speeds, fractions below the speed of light, energies far exceeding those observed in Earth's corresponding magnetospheric region.
The key finding is a scaling relationship: the size of a planet's foreshock and the maximum energy of particles it can accelerate are directly proportional. Jupiter's foreshock, driven by the largest planetary magnetic field in the solar system -- about 20,000 times stronger than Earth's -- dwarfs Earth's equivalent zone, and Juno's measurements show that the particle energies scale upward accordingly. When the team extended this scaling relationship beyond the solar system, the projected energies aligned closely with the spectrum of galactic cosmic rays detected at Earth, particularly those attributed to supernova remnants where the shock waves are larger still.
Cosmic rays -- charged particles accelerated to relativistic energies by powerful astrophysical events -- have puzzled researchers for over a century since Victor Hess first detected them in 1912 balloon-borne experiments. The Juno data provide what the principal investigator, Dr. Jasper Halekas of the University of Iowa, described as 'the clearest in-situ demonstration to date that diffuse shock acceleration is a universal process,' operating over at least six orders of magnitude in spatial scale from Earth's modest magnetopause to galactic supernovae.
The significance of the Juno result lies partly in its methodological elegance: because Juno can measure particle spectra directly inside the acceleration zone rather than only detecting downstream products -- as is the case with most supernova observations -- the team was able to directly map the energisation process. Future work will focus on Saturn's even larger foreshock, data from which should be available from a proposed Saturn orbiter concept currently under review by the European Space Agency, as well as the outer planets' foreshocks if a future Neptune mission is approved.
- bow shock
- the outer boundary of a planet's magnetosphere where the solar wind is first slowed and diverted, forming a shape similar to the bow wave of a ship
- relativistic speed
- a speed that is a significant fraction of the speed of light, at which effects described by Einstein's theory of relativity become measurable
- magnetosphere
- the region of space surrounding a planet that is dominated by the planet's magnetic field rather than the solar wind
- diffuse shock acceleration
- a process by which charged particles gain energy by repeatedly crossing the boundary of a shock wave, gaining a small energy boost with each crossing
Level 4 - Advanced
The study published in Nature this week by Halekas et al., using Juno's energetic-particle instruments during close periapsis passes of Jupiter, delivers the first direct empirical constraint on the universality of diffusive shock acceleration (DSA) across planetary-scale magnetic environments. DSA -- the Fermi first-order mechanism by which charged particles scatter repeatedly across a shock front, gaining a factor of order v_shock/c per crossing -- has been the theoretical workhorse of cosmic-ray astrophysics for nearly five decades, but its applicability from magnetospheric foreshocks to galactic-scale supernova remnant (SNR) shocks has rested primarily on modelling rather than controlled observational comparison at intermediate scales. Juno supplies the missing rung on that ladder.
The core measurement is a power-law energy spectrum of suprathermal electrons in Jupiter's foreshock consistent with DSA predictions: spectral index gamma approximately 1.8 to 2.0, extending from a few keV to several MeV, with the high-energy cutoff scaling as expected from the ratio of Jupiter's bow-shock radius (~60 R_J) to Earth's (~15 R_E) -- a factor of four in linear dimension that implies roughly an order-of-magnitude increase in maximum particle energy. When the authors extrapolate this Bohm-diffusion-normalised scaling relation to the shock radii of young SNRs (~10 to 100 parsec), the projected maximum energies bridge the energy gap between solar-system measurements and the knee of the cosmic-ray spectrum near 3 x 10^15 eV, substantially constraining open questions in cosmic-ray phenomenology that have persisted since Kulikov and Khristiansen's 1958 identification of the spectral break.
The methodological advantage of an in-situ measurement is significant. Supernova remnant observations are necessarily remote: X-ray synchrotron emission from relativistic electrons and gamma-ray pion-decay signatures from accelerated protons provide indirect diagnostics of the acceleration region, but phase-space distributions, pitch-angle scattering rates, and the precise shock-normal geometry remain inaccessible. Juno's magnetic-field and particle sensors measure the full particle distribution function within the foreshock, constraining both the injection threshold and the diffusion coefficient in a way that directly tests the theoretical framework. The result is an unusually tight observational anchor for models that span twelve orders of magnitude in physical scale.
The limitations are worth noting. Jupiter's foreshock is a quasi-parallel shock environment -- the upstream magnetic field is broadly aligned with the shock normal -- whereas many SNR shocks operate in more oblique configurations where perpendicular DSA variants may be more relevant. Furthermore, Juno lacks the sensitivity to measure the proton component at the highest energies, and protons carry the dominant fraction of cosmic-ray energy above the knee; the electron analogy therefore rests on the assumption of charge-independent scaling, which theory supports but which has not been directly tested across the same spatial range. These caveats invite a future outer-solar-system mission with higher-energy proton channels, a capability that the proposed Interstellar Probe concept -- a 1,000-AU mission in early community review at NASA's Science Mission Directorate -- could in principle deliver in the 2040s.