Juno gets up close and personal with Jupiter’s Great Red Spot

You won’t want to miss the best pictures we’ve ever taken of this Earth-sized storm.
By | Published: July 14, 2017 | Last updated on May 18, 2023
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Jupiter’s Great Red Spot pops in this enhanced-color image, taken by the Juno spacecraft during its seventh close Jupiter flyby July 10, 2017.
NASA/JPL-Caltech/SwRI/MSSS/Gerald Eichstadt
Jupiter’s Great Red Spot is one of its most iconic features. The giant storm, which has been raging in the atmosphere of the gas giant for at least hundreds of years, is larger than Earth and can be seen easily even with an amateur telescope. But despite its size and prominence, the Great Red Spot is a mystery that continues to intrigue planetary scientists. Now, NASA’s Juno probe has returned the best ever images of the Great Red Spot, following its most recent close flyby of our solar system’s largest planet July 10.

The pictures the probe returned are stunning. As it passed over the Great Red Spot at a height of 5,600 miles (9,000 kilometers), Juno’s imaging camera, JunoCam, snapped several apple core-shaped photos of the feature in optical light. But pretty pictures weren’t Juno’s only goal; all of the spacecraft’s eight additional instruments recorded data during the flyby as well. Those instruments include a magnetometer, a radio and plasma wave sensor, a microwave radiometer, and an ultraviolet spectrograph. By combining the multi-wavelength data from these state-of-the-art instruments, scientists can create a more complete model of the storm than ever before.

“These highly-anticipated images of Jupiter’s Great Red Spot are the ‘perfect storm’ of art and science. With data from Voyager, Galileo, New Horizons, Hubble and now Juno, we have a better understanding of the composition and evolution of this iconic feature,” said Jim Green, NASA’s director of planetary science, in a press release.

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The close-up images JunoCam takes are shaped roughly like an apple core because the craft swings so close to the planet during perijove, affecting the illuminated area the camera can capture.
NASA-JPL/SwRI/MSSS/Ted Stryk
The Great Red Spot has been seen continuously since at least 1830, though it may have developed earlier. In recent decades, it has been shrinking in size; in April of this year, it measured 10,159 miles (16,350km) across, or about 1.3 Earth diameters. Its winds have been clocked at 400 miles per hour (640km/h), though its center is calm, like the eye of an earthly hurricane. Recent experiments suggest that the storm’s red color is caused by a reaction in Jupiter’s upper atmosphere when energetic ultraviolet photons in sunlight hit ammonia and acetylene gas.

“For hundreds of years scientists have been observing, wondering and theorizing about Jupiter’s Great Red Spot. Now we have the best pictures ever of this iconic storm,” said Scott Bolton, Juno principal investigator from the Southwest Research Institute in San Antonio. Although he added that it will take time to sort through and analyze the influx of new data, the details Juno is returning are vital to understanding the storm’s dynamics, both past and present.

The July 10 flyby was Juno’s seventh close approach to the planet; in total, it will orbit Jupiter 37 times, with the closest pass bringing the spacecraft within about 2,100 miles (3,400km) of the cloud tops. At mission’s end in 2018, Juno will plunge into the planet’s atmosphere, just like the Cassini mission currently orbiting Saturn.

The images Juno takes are publicly available on the JunoCam website; NASA encourages citizen scientists to download and process the images, then share them on the site’s photo gallery.
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While the Great Red Spot gets all the glory, Jupiter’s entire atmosphere appears to be a turbulent place as well.
NASA/SwRI/MSSS/Gerald Eichstädt/Justin Cowart