Check Out the Stunning New Images of Jupiter From NASA’s Juno Spacecraft

NASA’s Juno spacecraft has just released stunning images of Jupiter, captured during its 66th flyby of the largest and oldest planet in our solar system.

The Juno mission has been studying the Jovian system—Jupiter, along with its rings and many moons—to learn about the giant planet’s formation and evolution with the hope that it might shed light on the development of the entire solar system, per a NASA statement. The solar-powered spacecraft launched from Cape Canaveral, Florida, in August 2011 and reached Jupiter in July 2016.

“Jupiter is the Rosetta Stone of our solar system. Juno is going there as our emissary—to interpret what Jupiter has to say,” Scott Bolton, Juno principal investigator and associate vice president of the Southwest Research Institute’s Science and Engineering Division, says in the statement.

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    • 🔍🦘🛎
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      713 days ago

      It’s been mixing itself for decades!

      • @[email protected]
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        413 days ago

        It also has high gravity that promotes separation by density and a hot turbulent core that messes that up. So an equilibrium of opposing forces keeps it mixed but not homogeneous.

        It’s such a beautiful planet, isn’t it?

        • 🔍🦘🛎
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          313 days ago

          Definitely more beautiful than a planet like Uranus