NASA HAS RELEASED a series of stunning images of a raging storm on Jupiter, known as the Great Red Spot, snapped earlier this week as an unmanned probe zipped by.
The US space agency’s Juno spacecraft flew over the storm late on Monday, offering humanity’s closest look yet at the iconic feature of our solar system’s largest planet.
“For hundreds of years scientists have been observing, wondering and theorising about Jupiter’s Great Red Spot,” said Scott Bolton, Juno principal investigator from the Southwest Research Institute in San Antonio.
“Now we have the best pictures ever.”
Scientists hope to learn more about what drives the storm, and Bolton said it would take some time to analyse the data captured by Juno’s eight instruments as it passed over the tempest at a height of 9,000 kilometres.
The Great Red Spot measured 16,350 kilometres wide on 3 April of this year, which is 1.3 times the size of the Earth.
It has been monitored since 1830 and has possibly existed for more than 350 years.
Juno launched in 2011 and began orbiting Jupiter last year. Its next flyby is planned for early September.
Your contributions will help us continue
to deliver the stories that are important to you
“These highly-anticipated images of Jupiter’s Great Red Spot are the ‘perfect storm’ of art and science,” said Jim Green, NASA’s director of planetary science.
“We are pleased to share the beauty and excitement of space science with everyone.”
Read: ‘I didn’t want to be known as the person who broke something on the Hubble telescope’ >
Read: European Space Agency gives go-ahead for Ireland’s first satellite >
COMMENTS (38)