JUPITER ! AMAZING NEW IMAGES!

in #nasa8 years ago

![pia21391.png](
Juno acquired this image on Feb. 2, 2017, at 6:13 a.m. PDT (9:13 a.m. EDT), as the spacecraft performed a close flyby of Jupiter. When the image was taken, the spacecraft was about 9,000 miles (14,500 kilometers) from the planet.
pia21390(2).jpeg The image was taken on Dec. 11, 2016 at 9:44 a.m. PST (12:44 p.m. EST), from an altitude of about 32,400 miles (52,200 kilometers) above the planet’s beautiful cloud tops.pia21381.pngJuno acquired the image, looking directly at the Jovian south pole, on February 2, 2017, at 6:06 a.m. PST (9:06 a.m. EST) from an altitude of about 63,400 miles (102,100 kilometers) above Jupiter's cloud tops. Cyclones swirl around the south pole, and white oval storms can be seen near the limb -- the apparent edge of the planet.pia21383.jpg NASA’s Juno spacecraft skimmed the upper wisps of Jupiter’s atmosphere when JunoCam snapped this image on Feb. 2 at 5:13 a.m. PT (8:13 a.m. ET), from an altitude of about 9,000 miles (14,500 kilometers) above the giant planet’s swirling cloudtops.pia21382.png NASA’s Juno spacecraft soared directly over Jupiter’s south pole when JunoCam acquired this image on February 2, 2017 at 6:06 a.m. PT (9:06 a.m. ET), from an altitude of about 62,800 miles (101,000 kilometers) above the cloud tops.

From this unique vantage point we see the terminator (where day meets night) cutting across the Jovian south polar region’s restless, marbled atmosphere with the south pole itself approximately in the center of that border. The terminator is offset a bit because it’s summer in Jupiter’s southern hemisphere. However, the tilt of Jupiter’s spin axis is only 3 degrees, much less than Earth’s 23.5-degree tilt.

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Well said

Those pictures are breath taking! Good post!

Yeah I wish I could have been able to locate the original pictures took from Juno before NASA filters .....so people could see in contrast ....theirs always a debate about the legitimacy to NASA photos

All the raw pictures are accessible on the JunoCam website (see the link). The Juno probe is actually rotating while it capture an image resluting in a weird distortion of jupiter.

https://www.missionjuno.swri.edu/junocam/processing?source=junocam&ob_from=&ob_to=&perpage=16

Thank you for that ! My schedule has been so busy and my research is so across the board sometimes I feelas tho i rob the reader of information I might looked over or forgot ...I remembered soon as I posted those, that I should of applied the raw images.....but I guess that's just the perfectionists in all of us here on steemit ....getting a little better each time