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Space

High-Resolution Telescope Images Solve a Mystery About Jupiter's Great Red Spot (gemini.edu) 34

Researchers have collected some of the highest resolution images of Jupiter ever obtained from earth -- by combining images from Hawaii's Gemini North telescope with images from the Hubble Space Telescope and NASA's Juno probe (currently orbiting Jupiter).

The images -- assembled from three years of observations -- "confirm that dark spots in the famous Great Red Spot are actually gaps in the cloud cover and not due to cloud color variations," explains an announcement from the Gemini Observatory. Gemini North's Near Infrared Imager (NIRI) allows astronomers to peer deep into Jupiter's mighty storms, since the longer wavelength infrared light can pass through the thin haze but is obscured by thicker clouds high in Jupiter's atmosphere. This creates a "jack-o-lantern"-like effect in the images where the warm, deep layers of Jupiter's atmosphere glow through gaps in the planet's thick cloud cover... A large number of very short exposure images are obtained and only the sharpest images, when the Earth's atmosphere is briefly stable, are used...

The ultra-sharp Gemini infrared images complement optical and ultraviolet observations by Hubble and radio observations by the Juno spacecraft to reveal new secrets about the giant planet... The detailed, multiwavelength imaging of Jupiter by Gemini and Hubble has, over the past three years, proven crucial to contextualizing the observations by the Juno orbiter, and to understanding Jupiter's wind patterns, atmospheric waves, and cyclones. The two telescopes, together with Juno, can observe Jupiter's atmosphere as a system of winds, gases, heat, and weather phenomena, providing coverage and insight much like the network of weather satellites meteorologists use to observe Earth.

The resolution was so high, the astronomer leading the observations says their telescope "could resolve the two headlights of a car in Miami, seen from New York City."
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High-Resolution Telescope Images Solve a Mystery About Jupiter's Great Red Spot

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  • These pictures from Earth (and from orbit) are great, sure. But looking back at the amazing pictures from the Voyagers (1979) I can't help but think the progress is going backwards.
    • by cusco ( 717999 )

      Voyagers were snapshots, one moment in time, at a medium resolution but which were better than anything up to that pont. Juno is there taking high resolution video clips of what is going on, Hubble and Gemini North are taking low res videos to fill in the gaps between Juno's passes. You really should check out the Juno imagery, it's stunning.

      https://www.nasa.gov/mission_p... [nasa.gov]

      Pick an image that catches your eye, and select View Image Feature link near the bottom of that page. The detail of some of them are

  • by scdeimos ( 632778 ) on Monday May 11, 2020 @04:45AM (#60046976)

    The resolution was so high, the astronomer leading the observations says their telescope "could resolve the two headlights of a car in Miami, seen from New York City."

    Jupiter's that way... [points up in the sky]

    • by ls671 ( 1122017 )

      The resolution was so high, the astronomer leading the observations says their telescope "could resolve the two headlights of a car in Miami, seen from New York City."

      Jupiter's that way... [points up in the sky]

      Also, the guy is obviously a flat-Earther astronomer if he thinks he can see a car in Miami from New-York. Now, that's a strange astronomer.

    • Plus. everyone knows that you can't see Miami from New York City anyway. As much as New York likes to think it's on top of the world, it's still at sea level, so it isn't nearly elevated enough to see around the curvature of the earth (or see over the tops of waves as they block the otherwise unobstructed view of Miami across our gloriously and uncontrovertibly flat earth).

  • Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Monday May 11, 2020 @06:26AM (#60047218)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by DThorne ( 21879 )
      Thank you for posting something actually germane to the discussion instead of the usual idiots claiming the article is all lies/wrong/oversimplified because the regulars here are smarter than anyone else. Honestly, I'm about done with this place.
      • Comment removed (Score:4, Informative)

        by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Monday May 11, 2020 @07:47AM (#60047370)
        Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • I wouldn't be surprised if all the gaz planets had a solid rocky core similar in size to the rocky planets. Maybe all planets form originally as gaz giants, and have their heavy atmosphere blown into space by the solar wind early after their formation, except those with strong magnetic fields (jupiter) or too far away (saturn, uranus, neptune).

          Also, if jupiter does have a metallic hydrogen center, I wonder if this center is in the form of a solid metallic core or a thick liquid metallic ocean.

  • This is just fodder for flat Earthers to show how this proves the Earth is flat. They'd idiotically argue that if the Earth were round, you couldn't "resolve the two headlights of a car in Miami, seen from New York City."

    Also, shouldn't they be called "disc Earthers" or "plane Earthers"? The Earth could be flat yet round like a circle.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • Were supposedly surrounded by very tall mountains in a circle, which the "globists" call Antarctica. Having just anyone visit there doesn't count, because they're likely to be under pay by NASA and will lie about it. So you need a real flat-earther to do the treck and the measurements.

  • I have seen womp rats smaller than this.

Every nonzero finite dimensional inner product space has an orthonormal basis. It makes sense, when you don't think about it.

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