http://eyes.jpl.nasa.gov/eyes-on-juno.html
From the description on the page: In this interactive visualization, you can ride along with the Juno spacecraft in real-time at any time during the entire mission. For example, watch the arrival at Jupiter on the 4th of July, 2016, or see Juno use Earth’s gravity as a slingshot to pick up speed, or just learn about the science of Jupiter and about the spacecraft itself. You can even turn on and off the magnetic field, aurorae, and the radiation belt, all in 3D! All of this and more is waiting to be explored.
Was...? Now that's some dedicated faith, still practising Ancient Roman religions!
Here's a recording https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zfIqnpqPFbI Applauses at 1:23:30
I did note that everybody in their control room is wearing identical grey polos... guess somebody really doesn't want a repeat of the shirt incident.
That shirt is 80s AF \m/ I can see how it might not fly at work though, at least not on a big PR day.
Juno Approach Movie of Jupiter and the Galilean Moons: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XpsQimYhNkA
The burn has started according to the tweets though! Good luck Juno and NASA team!
In addition, instead of wasting valuable power for radio transmission, they send a simple tone back to Earth [2]. With that, they can determine if various events were successful (tones are sent at specific event times), also calculate the changes in speed/rotation using doppler shifts from the "tones" [3] (validating the engine fired, current spin, etc)
[1] https://solarsystem.nasa.gov/basics/bsf13-1.php
[2] https://spaceflightnow.com/2016/06/30/juno-switched-to-autop...
Skip down to "Navigation Data Aquisition"
http://www.npr.org/2016/07/03/484259562/star-trackers-help-j...
View lots more details here: http://www.planetary.org/blogs/emily-lakdawalla/2016/0609060...