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On Sept. 21, 2003, NASA's Galileo mission to Jupiter and its moons came to an end.

After 14 years of exploration, the Galileo spacecraft intentionally fell into Jupiter and disintegrated in the planet's dense atmosphere. Galileo launched in 1989 from the payload bay of the space shuttle Atlantis and arrived at Jupiter in 1995. It was the first spacecraft to orbit Jupiter and the first to send a probe into its atmosphere. It discovered evidence of saltwater below the surfaces of three of Jupiter's moons – Europa, Ganymede and Callisto. It was purposely put on a collision course with Jupiter because it was running out of fuel, and NASA wanted to make sure that it wouldn't impact any of Jupiter's moons that could harbor life in their subsurface oceans.

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00:00On this day in space.
00:03In 2003, NASA's Galileo mission to Jupiter and its moons came to an end.
00:08After 14 years of exploration, the Galileo spacecraft intentionally fell into Jupiter and disintegrated in the planet's dense atmosphere.
00:15Galileo launched in 1989 from the payload bay of the space shuttle Atlantis, and it arrived in Jupiter in 1995.
00:21It was the first spacecraft to orbit Jupiter and the first to send a probe into its atmosphere.
00:26It discovered evidence of salt water below the surfaces of three of Jupiter's moons, Europa, Ganymede, and Callisto.
00:33It was purposely put on a collision course with Jupiter because it was running low on fuel,
00:37and NASA wanted to make sure that it wouldn't impact any of Jupiter's moons that could harbor life in their subsurface oceans.
00:42And that's what happened on this day in space.
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