Juno gets up close and personal with Jupiter's Great Red Spot
Jupiter's Great Red Spot is one of its most iconic features. The giant storm, which has been raging in the atmosphere of the gas giant for at least hundreds of years, is larger than Earth and can be seen easily even with an amateur telescope. But despite its size and prominence, the Great Red Spot is a mystery that continues to intrigue planetary scientists. Now, NASA's Juno probe has returned the best ever images of the Great Red Spot, following its most recent close flyby of our solar system's largest planet July 10.
The pictures the probe returned are stunning. As it passed over the Great Red Spot at a height of 5,600 miles (9,000 kilometers), Juno's imaging camera, JunoCam, snapped several apple core-shaped photos of the feature in optical light. But pretty pictures weren't Juno's only goal; all of the spacecraft's eight additional instruments recorded data during the flyby as well. Those instruments include a magnetometer, a radio and plasma wave sensor, a microwave radiometer, and an ultraviolet spectrograph. By combining the multi-wavelength data from these state-of-the-art instruments, scientists can create a more complete model of the storm than ever before.
"These highly-anticipated images of Jupiter's Great Red Spot are the 'perfect storm' of art and science. With data from Voyager, Galileo, New Horizons, Hubble and now Juno, we have a better understanding of the composition and evolution of this iconic feature," said Jim Green, NASA's director of planetary science, in a press release.
Also at Spaceflight Now and KQED. JunoCam Image Processing Gallery.
Previously: Juno to Image Jupiter's Great Red Spot on July 10th
(Score: 3, Informative) by FatPhil on Monday July 17 2017, @02:56PM (3 children)
https://d2xkkdgjnsfvb0.cloudfront.net/Vault/Thumb?VaultID=10456&Interlaced=1&Mode=R&ResX=960&OutputFormat=jpg&Quality=90&t=1499971729 via J/S-laden https://www.missionjuno.swri.edu/junocam/processing?source=junocam
I remember seeing a 3D fly-through of the surface of mars at the NASA museum which was trying to wow the viewer with how impressive the mountain ranges and canyons were. Then I noticed some smallprint that said "we've scaled the Z direction by a factor of 5" (or was it 10). I.e. the mountains and canyons weren't impressive, it was no better than fake.
I wish NASA would try to get people impressed with that which is real. Sure, hollywood's more pneumatic, and will look much more "impressive", but who knows - that might even be a good thing, it might teach people to be more critical of the garbage physics and super-reality that's being jetisoned at their retinas at unrealistic speed.
Great minds discuss ideas; average minds discuss events; small minds discuss people; the smallest discuss themselves
(Score: 2) by bob_super on Monday July 17 2017, @06:32PM (2 children)
Not just slow old geezers: NASA's public outreach learns from Instagram filters and FB selective publishing...
(Score: 2) by FatPhil on Tuesday July 18 2017, @03:25PM (1 child)
Great minds discuss ideas; average minds discuss events; small minds discuss people; the smallest discuss themselves
(Score: 2) by bob_super on Tuesday July 18 2017, @05:27PM
Ready for internet fame, as planets' good pictures crumble apart when you look close:
Jupiter's eye looks like it has glaucoma (and/or myxomatosis).
Saturn's beautiful rings are amazingly shallow.
Pluto has an icy-cold heart.
Venus's bright appearance is a hot toxic mess.