the majestic planet in infrared light—including the "Great Red Spot." Look at any image of Jupiter and one feature is hard to ignore—its “Great Red Spot,” a massive storm raging close to ...
Jupiter’s iconic Great Red Spot (GRS), a huge storm that has raged for nearly two centuries, is slowly disappearing. New ...
The Hubble Space Telescope has been imaging the outer planets of our solar system for a decade, learning about their strange ...
The dark UV ovals were first detected by NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope during the late 1990s at the north and south poles.
Jupiter's Great Red Spot is one of the most famous and spectacular sights in the Solar Systems. Wider than the diameter of the Earth, the spot is a giant vortex of winds up to 400 kilometers per hour.
As autumn winds down and winter begins, these December evenings are graced with not only huge, breathtaking constellations ...
Encountering Neptune in 1989, NASA's Voyager mission completed humankind's first close-up exploration of the four giant outer ...
But even these mega-storms are nothing compared to Jupiter’s Great Red Spot (GRS). Around the width of Earth, with winds of 400 mph, this giant system has been churning over Jupiter for hundreds of ...
Video: Jupiter's Great Red Spot is SHRINKING - and now scientists think they finally know why Jupiter's Great Red Spot is SHRINKING - and now scientists think they finally know why. Researchers at ...
Transits, occultations, eclipses, and shadow transits of the jovian moons are perfect events for telescopic viewing.
[Related: Jupiter’s Great Red Spot keeps shrinking.] “The haze in the dark ovals is 50 times thicker than the typical concentration which suggests it likely forms due to swirling vortex ...
Jupiter's Great Red Spot There is evidence to suggest that this peculiar marking is the top of a "Taylor column": a stagnant region above a bump or depression at the bottom of a circulating fluid ...