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Jupiter's Great Red Spot — the most powerful storm in the solar system — is an planetary icon. See photos of the giant storm, which has been shrinking over time, in our full gallery here.
An icon in the shape of a lightning bolt. Impact Link Jupiter looks good in all kinds of light. A set of images released Tuesday show the planet in infrared, visible, and ultraviolet light.
NASA just released photos of Jupiter that are clearer and closer ... Juno mission offers a new look at the planet’s famous Great Red Spot storm. It’s more than a spot, really, as photo ...
The Great Red Spot on Jupiter continues to shrink, spectacular new images from the Hubble Space Telescope show. (See big versions of the pictures here and here.) But, scientists say, the big storm ...
Jupiter, the giant of our solar system, is home to a variety of fascinating phenomena. Among these, the Great Red Spot (GRS) ...
Jupiter’s signature feature — its Great Red Spot — might not be the same dark spot seen on the giant planet more than three centuries ago. From 1665 to 1713, astronomer Giovanni Domenico ...
If the moon is said to be made of cheese (it’s not), then Jupiter’s famed Great Red Spot (GRS ... CREDIT: NASA, ESA, Amy Simon (NASA-GSFC); Image Processing: Joseph DePasquale (STScI) The ...
The scale is incredible; the Great Red Spot is a vast anticyclonic storm that's currently 7,767 miles (12,500 km) across, while tiny Amalthea is pictured 112,500 miles (181,000 km) above Jupiter's ...
In the image, Jupiter's famous Great Red Spot, which appears red in visible light, is a instead a remarkably bright shade of blue. Hubble Space Telescope image of an ultraviolet view of Jupiter ...
Jupiter’s iconic Great Red Spot is a massive storm that ... analyzing historical drawings and images that depict the spot’s structure, location and size over time. The data was used to create ...
Astronomers have followed this downsizing since the 1930s. Image released May 15, 2014. [See full story.] Jupiter's Great Red Spot seen in 1995. Image released May 15, 2014. [See full story.] ...
Above, you can see Jupiter in 4k Ultra HD. Which is kind of useless ... So next year we'll get to see how much more the Great Red Spot has changed.