Hosted by Cstar1|Galaxies & More!
We keep our star talk down to earth! Beginning stargazers, professional astronomers, armchair astronauts and the cosmologically curious are all invited to join us. Galaxies Astronomy Club was founded in 1994.
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1/9/18
Bolton showing stunning images of Jupiter’s pole from JunoCam. ‘The blue is real’ and a bit unexpected https://t.co/Nsz1MzBgaq #AAS231 pic.twitter.com/GNQLEGKajD
— Meg Schwamb (@megschwamb) January 9, 2018
1/10/18
I think these are the first infrared images I've seen of Jupiter.
So to clarify here (because I messed it up earlier) what was presented this morning at #AAS231 were infrared images of Jupiter's north pole (left, via @lrebull) and south pole (right, via @Stardustspeck) showing respectively eight and five cyclones circling central vortices. ???? pic.twitter.com/lFkfl25wam
— Jason Major (@JPMajor) January 9, 2018
1/11/18
By the time Juno launched, astronomers had a pretty good idea of what to expect from the new images and data it would collect at Jupiter - or so they thought.
Read more from Space.com1/27/18
I tucked a little @NASAJuno in just for fun :) pic.twitter.com/F4nUtz55qg
— Jason Major (@JPMajor) January 26, 2018
2/7/18
"My latest #Jupiter science flyby is complete! All science instruments + #JunoCam were operating to collect data that is now being returned to Earth. https://t.co/LzLeCxWUvy"
Read more from Twitter3/10/18
Jupiter. Just. Keeps. Getting. WEIRDER. https://t.co/kVSBHBZ75r pic.twitter.com/QfGRHsKQtq
— Phil Plait (@BadAstronomer) March 9, 2018
4/3/18
A swath of #Jupiter's northern hemisphere with an anticyclonic storm imaged by @NASAJuno during its P12 pass on April 1, 2018 pic.twitter.com/lt1HB4q8nj
— Jason Major (@JPMajor) April 2, 2018
4/8/18
Eastern Great Red Spot on #Jupiter - @NASAJuno Perijove 12, April 1st - https://t.co/2jAS1IxUir pic.twitter.com/1tc3TVDNw5
— Kevin M. Gill (@kevinmgill) April 8, 2018
4/8/18
More images, more mysteries.
Read more from Inverse