QUICK SEARCH
QUICK LINKS
Juno Participating Scientist Program (Juno PSP) | |
The ROSES 2017 Juno Participating Scientist Program (Juno PSP) Appendix E.5 | |
  | |
This program element uses the two-step proposal submission process outlined in Appendix C.1, Section 2. Mandatory Step-1 Proposals are due by March 1 2018 and Step-2 Proposals are due April 26, 2018. | |
  | |
The Juno Participating Scientist Program is jointly solicited by the NASA Planetary Science and Heliophysics Divisions. All proposals will be solicited through this program element and will be reviewed together. Proposers do not need to include any Division-relevant information in the proposal except where specified in this program element. This program element is governed by information contained in Appendix C.1, Planetary Science Research Overview , except where superseded by Appendix E.5 | |
  | |
To ensure a fair competition between proposals from proposers with connections to the Juno mission team and those without, proposals are forbidden from using information, including mission science data, not publicly available (see Section 2.2). All information used in the proposal document that pertains to Juno or other missions must be available in the public domain at least 30 days before the Step-2 deadline. For the purposes of this restriction, the public domain includes publication in a publicly accessible archive (e.g. Planetary Data System), final publication in a scientific journal, and posting on the NSPIRES pages for this program element. |
  | ||
Critical Dates | ||
Step 1 Proposal Due Date | Data Included in PDS by | Step 2 Proposal Due Date |
03/01/18 | 03/27/18 | 04/26/18 |
Mission data are available from the Planetary Data System (PDS). | ||
Juno Data Available at PPI | |
Inst ID | Instrument |
---|---|
FGM | Fluxgate Magnetometer |
JAD | Jovian Auroral Plasma Distributions Experiment |
JEDI | Jupiter Energetic-Particle Detector Instrument |
WAV | Plasma Wave Spectrometer |
Other Data Within PDS | ||
The following Discipline Nodes also have Juno information pages: | ||
Atmospheres Node Cartography and Imaging Sciences Node | ||
Ancillary data (SPICE files) for Juno can be obtained from the NAIF Node |
Proposals submitted to this Program Element must include a Data Management Plan (DMP) consistent with the requirements outlined in Appendix C.1. This must be placed in a special section, no longer than two pages in length, immediately following the References and Citations section for the Scientific/Technical/Management portion of the proposal. The Individual Proposer's Archive Guide (IPAG) is available on the PPI website. | |
  | |
Any higher-order data products derived from the Juno mission data is anticipated to be archived with the PDS, with exceptions rare. DMPs that do not commit to archiving mission-data-derived higher-order data products in the Planetary Data System (PDS) must justify why an exception is appropriate for that data product. Unless infeasible or unreasonable, all data produced through a proposal to this program element must be made publicly available through an online archive. | |
  | |
The lead PDS Node for the Juno mission is the Atmospheres Node and they are available to provide guidance to those proposers as needed; proposers not already preparing to archive into another PDS node should contact Dr. Lynn Neakrase (lneakras@nmsu.edu) for the PDS letter of support as well as for assistance with questions about the process (including anticipated scheduling and costs). | |
  | |
The objective of the Juno Participating Scientist Program (Juno PSP) is to enhance the scientific return during the science phase of the Juno mission by expanding participation in the mission through new investigations that broaden and/or complement existing mission investigations. |
The Juno mission includes nine instruments and one investigation available for use in proposals to this program element:
| |
  | |
The Juno PSP Proposal Information Package (PIP), which includes the Juno Rules of the Road, and can be found on the NSPIRES page for this program element, has detailed information about the mission. Detailed sub-objectives and measurement requirements are given for each of the science objectives. The description of the science instruments and investigations are briefly described and links to instrument papers with more information are provided. It is expected that information in the PIP will be incorporated into submitted proposals to demonstrate feasibility of those studies. Proposers are expected to read the PIP document because not all relevant information about the mission is included in this program element. |
NEW RELEASES
PDS RESOURCES
OTHER RESOURCES
Privacy / Copyright Freedom of Information Act |
Web Master: PDS-PPI Operator NASA Official: Becky McCauley-Rench |