The spot we see today isn’t the same one the Italian astronomer Cassini discovered centuries ago, research shows.
the majestic planet in infrared light—including the "Great Red Spot." Look at any image of Jupiter and one feature is hard to ignore—its “Great Red Spot,” a massive storm raging close to ...
Jupiter’s iconic Great Red Spot (GRS), a huge storm that has raged for nearly two centuries, is slowly disappearing. New ...
New research from a team of citizen scientists challenges the old idea that Jupiter's visible clouds are formed of ammonia ...
Astrophysicists recently discovered that Jupiter's Great Red Spot is extremely hot. This new discovery could help explain a mystery that's plagued scientists for decades. Read more about the ...
The most famous storm in the solar system is also one of the largest: Jupiter's Great Red Spot. The storm is just a blemish on Jupiter, but if you compare it to the size of Earth — this storm ...
Jupiter's Great Red Spot There is evidence to suggest that this peculiar marking is the top of a "Taylor column": a stagnant region above a bump or depression at the bottom of a circulating fluid ...
Io is about 220,000 miles above Jupiter's Great Red Spot; Europa is about 375,000 miles above Jupiter's clouds. This color image was assembled from three black and white negatives. This color ...
Its Great Red Spot seems to peer out from the swirling vapors like an enormous eye in the face of a striped giant. Though seemingly serene when viewed from the relative safety of our home world ...
A new study predicts that even though it’s not any less thick, Jupiter’s Great Red Spot is definitely much smaller than 350 years ago. Scientists will compare their modelled estimates to Juno ...
M. Peek, who took for his subject the physical conditions of the planet Jupiter, and in particular the red spot. It is certain that Schwabe's drawings in 1831 showed this spot, and there is ...