Outbreak! [ID: 1046]

Not Currently Tracking
Submitted by : Tom on 2017-01-18 22:26 UT

This region is part of the South Equatorial Belt outbreak currently going on and Juno is going to fly right over it on this pass!

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10 Comments

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  1. comment by Geoffreywoo-28 on 2017-11-06 02:44 UT

    I chose this since the color looked different and I thought there would be a storm.

  2. comment by Mikkilineni-02 on 2017-02-21 02:55 UT

    I chose this location because it contains different colors and potentially different movement. It appears to be a spot worth investigating further.

  3. comment by Sirius-6 on 2017-02-20 19:43 UT

    This one does sound really cool.

  4. comment by Thucydides-04 on 2017-02-18 21:03 UT

    Since this is an active feature, it seems like it would be an instant go-to, in order to get a current glimpse of what exactly these are, and why they appear!

  5. comment by Fujiiekio-14 on 2017-01-22 18:30 UT

    The South Equatorial Belt is the most variable belt. It would be a great opportunity to study these " outbreaks".

  6. comment by jbc on 2017-01-21 15:41 UT

    An active feature & Juno just happens to be in the right place at the right time. Would be a shame to miss the science opportunity!

  7. comment by TACTICAL8AC0N on 2017-01-20 22:20 UT

    i agree studying these"outbreaks" will help determine how, and why these happen

  8. comment by Glenn on 2017-01-19 01:25 UT
    JUNO SPECIALIST

    This is an important feature because it's a really serendipitous event: we have a spacecraft orbiting over a really rapidly changing feature with a strong vertical as well as horizontal component. There will be coincident observations from JIRAM in the near-infrared, as well as mulitple-wavelength synoptic observations from the Earth - from telescopes of all sizes that will provide context. But nothing else will get the spatial resolution JunoCam will achieve. - Glenn Orton, Juno coordinator of the Earth-based campaign for supporting observations.

    • comment by Ceres-00 on 2017-01-18 23:48 UT

      Yes image this region!