Traveling above Jupiter at more than 130,000 miles per hour,
NASA's $1 billion Juno probe took its ninth set of stunning flyby images on
October 24. But the sun slipped between the giant planet and Earth for more
than a week, blocking the spacecraft from beaming home its precious bounty of
data.
Now that the conjunction is over, however, new raw image
data from Juno's ninth perijove — as the spacecraft's high-speed flybys are
called — has poured in. Researchers posted it all online on Tuesday, and a
community of amateurs and professionals has been busily processing the data to
yield colorful and stunning new pictures of Jupiter.
“Brand new Jupiter pics from @NASAJuno Perijove 09! What a blimmin' gorgeous/diabolical planet,” Seán Doran, a UK-based graphic artist who regularly processes NASA images, tweeted.
Below are some fresh, close-up images of Jupiter, along with
other unbelievable views captured from earlier perijoves.
In the most recent flyby, as with the previous eight, Juno's
flyby started over Jupiter's north pole.
Image Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/SwRI/MSSS/Gerald
Eichstädt/Seán Doran |
The spacecraft then swept within a few thousand miles of the
gas giant, capturing stunning high-resolution views of its cloud tops.
At its closest approach to Jupiter during each flyby, the
robot briefly becomes the fastest human-made object in the solar system,
reaching speeds of around 130,000 miles per hour.
Then Juno flew back out into deep space, passing over
Jupiter's South Pole on its exit. Churning storms at the poles constantly
change their appearance.
Researchers upload the raw data sent by the probe to the
mission's website.
There, enthusiasts take the drab, mostly gray image data and
process it all into true-to-life color photos.
Many snapshots of Jupiter take on an artistic quality.
Others dazzle with their detail of the planet's thick cloud
bands and powerful storms. Jupiter is made up predominantly of hydrogen. The
simple, basic gas, a prime ingredient on the sun, accounts for 90 percent of
the atmosphere. Nearly 10 percent is composed of helium.
Some of the tempests are large enough to swallow planet
Earth — or at least a good chunk of it.
The planet's atmosphere is a turbulent mess of hydrogen and
helium gases. The atmosphere of Jupiter is the largest planetary atmosphere in
the Solar System. It is mostly made of molecular hydrogen and helium in roughly
solar proportions; other chemical compounds are present only in small amounts
and include methane, ammonia, hydrogen sulfide and water.
There are also traces of molecules like ammonia, methane,
sulfur, and water, which give the clouds different colors and properties.
The mixture sometimes creates features that look like faces
(as seen on the left in this image).
Other times, shining-white clouds fill up most of a band.
With an average temperature of minus 234 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 145 degrees
Celsius), Jupiter is frigid even in its warmest weather. Unlike Earth, whose
temperature varies as one moves closer to or farther from the equator,
Jupiter's temperature depends more on height above the surface.
Many cloud bands have features called chevrons. These
atmospheric disturbances blow at several hundreds of miles per hour and sometimes
zig-zag through a band, or punch through into others.
In this older view of Jupiter, from Juno's eighth perijove,
two cloud bands battle for dominance — one of which contains a swirling storm
many times larger than a hurricane on Earth.
The spacecraft will continue to document Jupiter for as long as NASA can keep it going. But not forever.
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