Storm Movies [ID: 3]

Juno’s orbit is evolving such that the closest approach latitude is moving to the north and we spend a lot of time seeing the southern hemisphere as the spacecraft is outbound from perijove. This extra time allows us to take multiple images in sequence and combine them into movies.

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  1. comment by Michael_Ferrer on 2023-12-05 16:01 UT

    Hey everyone. I hope you don't mind me asking. Where are the processed images of Perijove 56? Where is everybody?

  2. comment by Thiagoolson-88 on 2023-07-13 13:39 UT

    Storms could reveal information about Jupiter's atmosphere.

  3. comment by Saif_alfalasi1 on 2023-05-24 11:02 UT

    It matters what the colors are.

    Radiation is bright orange, and its mediation reveals potential roots for retracing.

    Red turns brilliant red, orange turns red, and red turns flat red. The colors then turn brown, which may be where the color of earth's soil originated.

  4. comment by Poe-26 on 2023-05-24 10:53 UT

    It matters what the colors are.

    Radiation is bright orange, and its mediation reveals potential roots for retracing.

    Red turns brilliant red, orange turns red, and red turns flat red. The colors then turn brown, which may be where the color of earth's soil originated.

  5. comment by AhmadAyoubAlmulla on 2023-05-24 10:50 UT

    Jupiter's storms are known for their intensity and violence. The winds within these storms can blow at incredible speeds, sometimes exceeding 600 kilometers per hour (370 miles per hour). The storms create strong updrafts and downdrafts, which cause turbulent movements in the atmosphere.

  6. comment by Ozenuma-00 on 2023-05-24 10:49 UT

    an atmospheric weather layer that extends far beyond its water clouds and a deep interior with a dilute heavy element core.

  7. comment by Polarcuspian on 2022-09-28 15:42 UT

    The colours are important.

    Bright orange is radiation, and the mediation of that shows possible origins, to retrace.

    Orange becomes red, red goes bright red to flat red. Then the colours go brown, possible origin of earth soil colour also.

    Have a good day.

    • comment by Polarcuspian on 2022-10-03 00:44 UT

      The bands of Jupiter that are white and orange and burnt orange are explained elsewhere.

      ☁☁☁☁☁☁☁

      ✨✨✨✨✨✨✨

      ☁☁☁☁☁☁☁

      How happy is the community with current explainations?

    • comment by Polarcuspian on 2022-10-03 00:54 UT

      The surface of Jupiter on this site is said to be about -100°C.

      ☁✨☁✨

      Yet we see the air can get way, way hotter. Water on the earth allows surface temperatures of even +1-3 °C average, clouds at near +300 °C in the radiation.

      ☁✨☁✨

      Its a higher extreme of surface and atmospheric temperatures in many places in the Solar System.

      ☁✨☁✨

      Thinking out loud.

    • comment by Polarcuspian on 2022-10-03 00:58 UT

      Out loud imagesu

    • comment by Polarcuspian on 2022-10-03 00:59 UT

      Gotta watch the spelling.

    • comment by Polarcuspian on 2022-10-03 05:46 UT

      What i think is the Earth also has convection currents, less visible than Jupiters, but it is a similar convection banding.

    • comment by Polarcuspian on 2022-10-03 11:25 UT

      The last post i put here has been 25% of the post. Many people are mo longer farmers, and water barrels freezing in root cellars has no meaning to them. This is OK. But don`t forget silences are what all good investigative reporting does.

    • comment by Polarcuspian on 2022-10-03 11:33 UT

      The last post i put here has been 25% of the post. Many people are mo longer farmers, and water barrels freezing in root cellars has no meaning to them. This is OK. But don`t forget silences are what all good investigative reporting follows.

      I submitted my work to the last NASA townhall meeting to separate swampgas from Van Allen Radiation as an advance on science that needs dissecting.

  8. comment by Avanteesh on 2022-09-24 09:00 UT

    Interesting! I guess its named as 'Oval-B'. Like a spinning vortex

  9. comment by AnirbanAcharya on 2022-08-23 19:52 UT

    This is looking like a cyclones in jupiter and this type of cyclones arises from water bodies such as seas, oceans. So there may be a chance of existence of water in jupiter. If water is found to exist in jupiter, then there may be a chance of existence of living beings in jupiter.

  10. comment by Sherenna on 2022-08-02 03:48 UT

    I think it would be interesting to see a time lapse of the cyclones at the south pole. Being able to study how the cyclones interact, how their winds affect one another, and how they are maintained is of interest to me. How do these cyclones remain so stable while all rotating in the same direction? Why don't they cancel one another out? These are some questions we might be able to begin answering if we can get detailed time-lapses of polar cyclones.

  11. comment by JUNGKOOK on 2022-07-10 00:04 UT

    Wow! Great. It is nice.I like this mission very much.Congratulations NASA Juno.I love NASA very much.And my ambition is NASA.

  12. comment by nicolascr0ce on 2022-07-06 21:09 UT

    will you allow big images to process too? where can we find big files? actual images are 1600px and from large distance....

  13. comment by Permeke-45 on 2022-07-06 03:38 UT

    Is that in true colors?

  14. comment by Danifanto on 2022-06-30 20:21 UT

    Los vórtices Más grande se han entrelazados entre carga positiva y negativa mientras las cargas que viajan al rededores del planeta con su compuestos químicos, estás se encuentran con su carga opuestas formando las llamadas turbulencias que solo chocan y se devuelven mientras que las (+)(-) se unen formando más grande el vórtice esa es mi opinión de estudios.

  15. comment by MANSI on 2021-06-16 06:37 UT

    How many storms have occurred in the last 4 months?

  16. comment by RishabhJain on 2021-02-25 08:37 UT

    During the week of July 16, 1994, comet Shoemaker-Levy 9, broken into 20 plus pieces by tidal forces on its last orbit, smashed into the planet Jupiter, releasing the explosive energy of 500 thousand megatons. A team of observers from LLNL used the LLNL Speckle Imaging Camera mounted on the University of California`s Lick Observatory 3 Meter Telescope to capture continuous sequences of planet images during the comet encounter. Post processing with the bispectral phase reconstruction algorithm improves the resolution by removing much of the blurring due to atmospheric turbulence. High resolution images of the planet surface showing the aftermath of the impact are probably the best that were obtained from any ground-based telescope. We have been looking at the regions of the fragment impacts to try to discern any dynamic behavior of the spots left on Jupiter`s cloud tops. Such information can lead to conclusions about the nature of the comet and of Jupiter`s atmosphere. So far, the Hubble Space Telescope has observed expanding waves from the G impact whose mechanism is enigmatic since they appear to be too slow to be sound waves and too fast to be gravity waves, given the present knowledge of Jupiter`s atmosphere. Some of our data on the G and L impact region complements the Hubble observations but, so far, is inconclusive about spot dynamics.

    • comment by Polarcuspian on 2022-10-02 01:18 UT

      Someone earlier stated a comment about possible life on Jupiter.

      If there was anything, it would now be comet - kill from the impacts, extinct as the dinosaurs.

  17. comment by Venvolkov-30 on 2020-12-18 03:59 UT

    Have the storms been getting bigger or are they staying around a size

  18. comment by Yusaku-71 on 2020-06-07 07:36 UT

    Can i know the wind speed of Jupiter?

    • comment by Polarcuspian on 2022-09-28 20:04 UT

      The ESI- earth similar inventory- may be overlooking the speed of spin as protecting life on earth.

      Jupiter spins so fast it takes 10 hours or so to turn.

      Earth breaks the speed barrier, and has 1/4 leeway with speed after the sound barrier.

      They say Jupiter can be heard in space it spins so fast.

  19. comment by Brie_11 on 2020-05-01 19:03 UT

    How many storms have occurred in the last 4 months?

  20. comment by Kelt-9b on 2020-04-05 05:31 UT

    Jupiter is covered with clouds of ammonia crystals mainly it sulfide's the orange, red and yellow coloration of the clouds and storms occurs due the compounds that change color when exposed to U-V light from the sun the substances could be hydrocarbons, sulfur or ammonia. these chromophores mix with the warmer lower deck of clouds leading to the varying color patterns on both the poles and overall the planet. We cannot map each storm exactly as the spacecraft is i a polar orbit and during a perijove it gets a less time span to click a picture instead as the spacecraft is northbound it gets more time observing the southern part so it when it passes by it takes multiple shots which are then sequenced and combined into a movie and during the next perijove it maps that place again informing us of the changes. These coloration can tell us about the true constituents of Jupiter's atmosphere and it's inner chaos.

  21. comment by Curious9 on 2020-04-01 01:30 UT

    Hello, can you add more videos and images of Jupiters storms

    • comment by Polarcuspian on 2022-09-29 07:16 UT

      https://www.universetoday.com/157776/a-fascinating-look-at-jupiters-clouds-where-the-light-intensity-is-converted-into-3d/

  22. comment by Vidpahananu-59 on 2020-03-21 17:52 UT

    How many storms have occurred during the last 2 months?

  23. comment by RyanCornell-56 on 2019-07-31 08:39 UT

    How have you tracked features in a long term version of changes to storms?

  24. comment by TheGamer0923 on 2019-07-29 23:32 UT

    ¿podrían sacar mas secuencias de las tormentas?

  25. comment by Halaesus-32 on 2019-05-10 03:04 UT

    How many storms have occurred in the last 6 months