The Juno Extended Mission (EM) comprises additional orbits, during which Juno will continue its observations of the Jupiter system. Juno's highly elliptic and almost polar trajectory exploits Jupiter's oblateness perturbation to precess the periapsis of the orbit northward, allowing Juno to cross the satellite orbital plane during the inbound trajec tory at closer distances from Jupiter during each revolution (Hansen et al., 2022). This trajectory design allowed the inclusion of 4 close encounters of the inner Galilean satellites, 1 of Ganymede, 1 of Europa and 2 of Io.The EM trajectory started diverging from the nominal trajectory after the 32nd perijove pass (PJ32), in order to enable the first Ganymede's flyby (hereafter referred to as G34, because it occurred just before the 34th perijove pass). On 7 June 2021, Juno successfully performed the close encounter with Ganymede with a closest approach altitude of 1,045 km and a relative velocity of 18.5 km/s. During the flyby, a coherent two-way radio link between Juno and the antennas of the Deep Space Network (DSN) was maintained, allowing to perform a radio occultation experiment, which detected a high electron density peak during the ingress occultation consistent with an ionosphere (Buccino et al., 2022). Moreover, Doppler shift measurements were acquired, offering the opportunity to update Ganymede's gravity field for the first time since the end of the Galileo mission.