Jupiter's Great Red Spot has been the biggest storm in the solar system for centuries. But lately, it seems to be shrinking..
Look at any image of Jupiter and one feature is hard to ignore—its “Great Red Spot,” a massive storm raging close to its equator. It’s so iconic that it’s unusual to see an image of ...
The image of Jupiter’s Great Red Spot was taken from about 9,600 miles away by the space probe Juno, which is exploring the massive planet in the first solar-powered mission in the outer solar ...
Jupiter’s rolling clouds and its massive storm, called the Great Red Spot, is what really sets the planet apart from its peers. Now, NASA’s Juno spacecraft has gotten its best look yet at the ...
Jupiter's Great Red Spot is around 1.3 times the diameter of Earth, measuring some 10,000 miles across. The storm has been observed for potentially over 350 years, but definitely at least 150 ...
This is our closest look at Jupiter's iconic "Great Red Spot." These photographs were taken by NASA's Juno probe. It flew just 5,600 miles above the Great Red Spot — an enormous storm that's 1.3 ...
The most famous storm in the solar system is also one of the largest: Jupiter's Great Red Spot. The storm is just a blemish on Jupiter, but if you compare it to the size of Earth — this storm ...
The data used to create the image is from a Hubble Space Telescope project to capture and map Jupiter's superstorm system.
As the largest planet in our solar system, Jupiter reflects a lot of the Sun’s light even though it is more than five times ...
Illustration of the Jovian moon Io, seen against the backdrop of Jupiter's Great Red Spot. The ... [+] latter is a vast, cyclonic storm - wider than the entire Earth - that has raged for centuries.
One enduring question is what drives Jupiter's Great Red Spot, and what will happen to it in the future. Then there's the question of what actually lies at Jupiter's core. Magnetic field data from ...
Near the equator lies Jupiter's Great Red Spot. Visible to the left of this image, one of 77 composite photographs that appeared in Otherworlds: Visions of our Solar System, the storm has raged on ...