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.
1573 messages in 259 discussions
Latest 3/4/19 by Cstar1
3574 messages in 841 discussions
177 messages in 23 discussions
9991 messages in 6759 discussions
2445 messages in 1638 discussions
183 messages in 110 discussions
684 messages in 442 discussions
1328 messages in 338 discussions
1471 messages in 1135 discussions
847 messages in 486 discussions
373 messages in 246 discussions
4108 messages in 2606 discussions
455 messages in 115 discussions
3006 messages in 2166 discussions
656 messages in 148 discussions
428 messages in 402 discussions
2/9/17
#Jupiter from below. Cyclones swirl around the Jovian south pole in a new citizen scientist-created #JunoCam image https://t.co/oFxsj7K1tH pic.twitter.com/zjakBGBEbA
— NASA's Juno Mission (@NASAJuno) February 9, 2017
2/13/17
this discussion and forum have been featured in today's Delphi Daily News ~join in!
3/25/17
Juno Spacecraft on Science-Collection Flyby Near Cloud-Tops of "Amazing Giant" Jupiter (VIDEO) https://t.co/lyg3Y4Ra7P pic.twitter.com/VvhAwbg66I
— The Daily Galaxy (@dailygalaxy) March 25, 2017
4/9/17
This enhanced-color photo of a mysterious dark spot on Jupiter seems to reveal a Jovian “galaxy” of swirling storms https://t.co/7cYMxNubi7 pic.twitter.com/959bXRjXFu
— NASA360 (@NASA360) April 9, 2017
4/30/17
NASA's Juno spacecraft has been stuck in the wrong orbit around Jupiter for months. https://t.co/zGcuxAvQiq via @PopSci
— NOVA | PBS (@novapbs) April 30, 2017
4/30/17
NASA/JPL-Caltech/SwRI/MSSS/John Landino
View of Jupiter's south pole, taken on February 2, 2017, from an altitude of about 62,800 miles.
5/6/17
Approaching Jupiter: an enhanced color image of the giant planet’s south pole as seen by @NASAJuno https://t.co/lPwCshFRiO pic.twitter.com/0jMAazTTsj
— NASA Solar System (@NASASolarSystem) May 6, 2017
5/13/17
I had no idea you could see Jupiter's satellites impact its aurora. Seeing this fig a lot at this meeting. So cool!! pic.twitter.com/fkJp328sgi
— Elisabeth Newton (@EllieInSpace) May 10, 2017
5/16/17
I applied some of the tools I developed for processing New Horizons Pluto data to enhance some of our earlier Jupiter flyby data. pic.twitter.com/6F199nQmQj
— Alex Parker (@Alex_Parker) May 16, 2017
5/18/17
In the wee hours of Friday morning, @NASAJuno makes its 5th science flyby over Jupiter's cloud tops. Details: https://t.co/ulD5X0htjP pic.twitter.com/d74rWNbFDT
— NASA (@NASA) May 18, 2017