When NASA's Juno spacecraft first flew by Jupiter on August 27, all we got was a fuzzy image of the gas giant from a glancing angle. But now scientists behind the mission are starting to trickle ...
This true color image of Jupiter is composed of three images taken in the blue, green and red regions of the spectrum. All images were taken from a distance of 77.6 million km on October 8 ...
During its latest pass over Jupiter's south pole, Juno snapped a series of images that reveal Jupiter like never before. Most notably, you can see over a dozen giant, white storms called ...
But when compared to its parent planet, Jupiter, this sprightly moon looks minuscule and harmless. The image of Io that John Brady used to make the comparison picture up top, is a true-color image ...
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