NASA shared a particularly impressive snapshot of the planet Jupiter on Friday. Space telescope Hubble even captured the gas giant, which is at least 588 million kilometers from Earth, with one of its moons in the background.
At the rear left of the spectacular photo, we see icy moon Europa, suspected of hiding a liquid ocean beneath the ice crust. Most striking, however, is the large red spot on Jupiter itself, which has been visible since the first observation in 1930. It is a gigantic storm that has likely raged through the planet’s atmosphere for centuries. That storm alone is bigger than Earth.
Below the red spot is a white spot, a storm called Oval BA. It was still very red in 2006, but is now much lighter in color. An elongated white spot can be seen in the Northern Hemisphere. This is also a storm, NASA reports.
406 million miles from Earth, Jupiter’s turbulent atmosphere was captured perfectly by @NASAHubble on Aug. 25 as the Great Red Spot plowed into storm clouds: https://t.co/H5szWfZZdL pic.twitter.com/PnyqSpUOpD
– NASA (@NASA) September 18, 2020
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