Jupiter's Great Red Spot has been the biggest storm in the solar system for centuries. But lately, it seems to be shrinking..
NASA’s Juno spacecraft captured a stunning portrait of a storm much larger than Earth that has been raging for hundreds of years. The image of Jupiter’s Great Red Spot was taken from about ...
Opinions expressed by Forbes Contributors are their own. Jamie Carter is an award-winning reporter who covers the night sky. This image of Jupiter from NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope in July ...
If you buy through a BGR link, we may earn an affiliate commission, helping support our expert product labs. Jupiter is the largest planet in our Solar System, and aside from Earth and perhaps ...
This time-lapse movie is assembled from Hubble Space Telescope observations spanning approximately 90 days between December 2023 and March 2024. CREDIT: NASA/ESA/Amy Simon (NASA-GSFC)/Joseph ...
As NASA's Juno probe flew over Jupiter on July 10th, it snapped photographs of the planet's most iconic feature, the Great Red Spot. Following is a transcript of the video. This is our closest ...
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.
The largest storm in the solar system has shrunk to two-thirds its original size. A new study predicts that even though it’s not any less thick, Jupiter’s Great Red Spot is definitely much ...
Though the storm appears red to the human eye, in this ultraviolet image it appears darker because high altitude haze particles absorb light at these wavelengths. The reddish, wavy polar hazes are ...
Opinions expressed by Forbes Contributors are their own. Jamie Carter is an award-winning reporter who covers the night sky. Illustration of the Jovian moon Io, seen against the backdrop of ...
Jupiter’s Great Red Spot—a rotating storm that is so large it could swallow Earth—isn’t what it used to be. Research has revealed that the crimson-hued spot visible today is, on average ...