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LITTLETON, CO--JULY 13TH 2010--Eric Roberts, left, Juno ATLO, (Assembly Test Launch Operations) Floor Lead, Lockheed Martin, talks with Tim Halbrook, Juno ALTO Manager, LM, right, next to the Juno spacecraft  at the High Bay Clean Room inside the Space Support Building at Lockheed Martin Tuesday morning, July 13th 2010. The spacecraft, heading to Jupiter,  is in the assembly stage and is scheduled to be completed and shipped to the Kennedy Space Center in April 2011, with a launch window for August 2011. The Juno spacecraft will take five-years to reach Jupiter's polar orbit and is "the next scientific investigation in the NASA New Frontiers Program." The mission primary goal is to " significantly improve our understanding of the formation and structure of Jupiter, which will also dramatically improve our understanding of the origins and early evolution of our solar system." (taken from a Juno website, (juno.wisc.edu/index_partner.html)  Andy Cross,  The Denver Post
LITTLETON, CO–JULY 13TH 2010–Eric Roberts, left, Juno ATLO, (Assembly Test Launch Operations) Floor Lead, Lockheed Martin, talks with Tim Halbrook, Juno ALTO Manager, LM, right, next to the Juno spacecraft at the High Bay Clean Room inside the Space Support Building at Lockheed Martin Tuesday morning, July 13th 2010. The spacecraft, heading to Jupiter, is in the assembly stage and is scheduled to be completed and shipped to the Kennedy Space Center in April 2011, with a launch window for August 2011. The Juno spacecraft will take five-years to reach Jupiter’s polar orbit and is “the next scientific investigation in the NASA New Frontiers Program.” The mission primary goal is to ” significantly improve our understanding of the formation and structure of Jupiter, which will also dramatically improve our understanding of the origins and early evolution of our solar system.” (taken from a Juno website, (juno.wisc.edu/index_partner.html) Andy Cross, The Denver Post
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Getting your player ready...

Lockheed Martin employees are in the midst of assembling the Juno spacecraft in south Jefferson County, equipping it with “armor” to withstand the radiation rigors of Jupiter.

Juno is scheduled to be launched by Centennial- based United Launch Alliance in August 2011. It will begin a year-long mission of exploring Jupiter’s origin and evolution in 2016.

The first of eight instruments was installed this month, along with a centimeter-thick titanium “vault” the size of an SUV trunk that will shield the electronics hub.

Lockheed designed and is building the spacecraft, vault, avionics and solar arrays, said Tim Gasparrini, Lockheed’s Juno program manager. About 300 Lockheed employees worked on the project at its peak.

In the photo above, Eric Roberts, left, Juno Assembly, Test and Launch Operations floor leader for Lockheed Martin, talks with Tim Halbrook, Juno ATLO manager, next to the Juno spacecraft in the high bay clean room Tuesday. Ann Schrader, The Denver Post

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