The largest and most powerful hurricanes ever recorded on Earth spanned over 1,000 miles across with winds gusting up to around 200 mph. That’s wide enough to stretch across nearly all U.S. states east of Texas. But even that kind of storm is dwarfed by the Great Red Spot, a gigantic storm in Jupiter. There, gigantic means twice as wide as Earth.
With tumultuous winds peaking at about 400 mph, the Great Red Spot has been swirling wildly over Jupiter’s skies for the past 150 years—maybe even much longer than that. While people saw a big spot in Jupiter as early as they started stargazing through telescopes in the 1600s, it is still unclear whether they were looking at a different storm. Today, scientists know the Great Red Spot is there and it’s been there for a while, but they still struggle to learn what causes its swirl of reddish hues.
Image credit: NASA/JPL
I’ve got the #Jupiter blues. See Jovian clouds in striking shades of blue in this new color-enhanced image.
Image Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech/SwRI/MSSS/Gerald Eichstädt/ Seán Doran
You and Grindelwald were as close as brothers…
Oh we were closer than brothers.
Northern Exposure 📷 See Jupiter’s stormy northern polar belt region in this new color-enhanced view captured during my latest flyby of the planet.
While at first glance the view may appear to be in Jupiter’s south, the raw source images were obtained when I was above the planet’s northern hemisphere looking south.
“About the first half of the season: Which one of you is more accurate? Who has the better pass completion rate?”
bonus: Mario undoing the smile upon realizing that Marco eliminated yourself very quickly:
canon
foto:minha
lua
See Jupiter’s stripes! Each of the alternating light and dark atmospheric bands in this image is wider than the Earth, and each one rages around Jupiter at hundreds of miles per hour. This citizen scientist-processed JunoCam image was taken on May 19, 2017, from an altitude of about 20,800 miles above the planet’s cloud tops.