New images of Jupiter

(missionjuno.swri.edu)

Comments

Aachen 6 November 2024
These come from Juno, a mission sent in 2011 and orbiting Jupiter since 2016. Must say it wasn't really on my radar anymore, but looking at the timeline on Wikipedia, it's still going around and getting close ("perijove") every month and a week or so, at an ever-increasing longitude https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Juno_(spacecraft)#Timeline The planned end of the mission is in about a year. The camera was "included in the payload to facilitate education and public outreach [but] later re-purposed to study the dynamics of Jupiter's clouds"
JoeAltmaier 6 November 2024
Juno was something about radar - penetrating the cloud layers to see what was below.

In college my son worked on the FFT engine that processed the radar data. He has code circling Jupiter!

openrisk 6 November 2024
Alien feel (and even unsettling at times).

I guess we have grown used to this by now, but from the Moon landing pictures, to the Mars rovers and the various asteroid and planetary missions the objects of the Solar system are now vivid, complex and above all, "real" places.

ohmahjong 6 November 2024
These kinds of images never fail to amaze me. I know there some editing going on to make them more visually accessible/impressive, but wow. Images are only going to get better, too.
sidcool 6 November 2024
It's so scary! All those swirls are like planet size hurricanes. Had Jupiter been bigger, it would have been a star, and life on earth would not have existed. Gives me chills.
lofaszvanitt 6 November 2024
How hard is it to send something there to give us a 24/7 feed of the planet from a fixed angle?
-5m 6 November 2024
These are beautiful! I wonder why they host the full resolution pictures on Flickr and not on their own servers though.
youtubeuser 6 November 2024
Maybe silly question, but why are the pictures cropped?
quincunx 6 November 2024
Why is Jupiter so colorful?

If the variation of color are indicative of a similar variation in density, why is there so much turbulence in Jupiter, why are the upper layers not more consistent? Tidal motion? Anyone know?

magicalhippo 6 November 2024
JunoCam[1] is not a scientific instrument on Juno. It was added just to make cool images like this for us to enjoy. I for one is happy for that.

Of course, data is data so there is some science planned using it.

[1]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JunoCam

ned99 6 November 2024
Breathtaking! Just imagine, a century from now, maybe later or sooner, we could visit planets like Jupiter, that once, we could only look at them from the photo. I hope the humanity lives on, and strives forward in engineering.
chrisco255 6 November 2024
Jupiter is so beautiful, the patterns in the clouds are incredible!
CheatModeON 6 November 2024
Feels like Van Gaugh has travelled to Jupiter already.
uhtred 6 November 2024
A big beautiful ball of gas floating around in empty space for absolutely no reason whatsoever!
procufly 6 November 2024
The image quality improvement is unbelievable on these photos!
pletnes 6 November 2024
Is anyone making posters I can get for christmas?
mobeigi 6 November 2024
So beautiful! I love these!
768DataSeeker 6 November 2024
The colour combo, so cool