The researchers, who include Alessandro Bruno of the University of Bari in Italy and the INFN in Bari, focused on a region known as the South Atlantic Anomaly, where Earth's inner Van Allen
radiation belt comes closest to the planet's surface and the density of particles encountered by the craft would likely be the highest.
Not exact matches
To understand — and eventually predict — which solar storms will intensify the
radiation belts, scientists want to know where the energy that accelerates the particles
comes from.
Its design is courtesy of the mission's navigators, who
came up with a trajectory that approaches Jupiter over its north pole and quickly drops to an altitude below the planet's
radiation belts as Juno races toward Jupiter's south pole.
Except no one knows where Tommy Wiseau
came from — New Orleans (as he claims), Poland (as may in fact be the case), or the Van Allen
radiation belt.