NASA has printed new images of Jupiter's most iconic and mysterious characteristic — its wonderful crimson Spot.
The space agency on Tuesday released a few pictures of the interplanetary landmark taken by its Juno spacecraft as it flew over Jupiter. The photographs exhibit a blob of swirling reddish colorations in the middle of Jupiter's white clouds.
Kevin Gill, a self-described "science facts visualization artist," took NASA's raw pictures to make the photographs seen above and under.
Scientists say the super pink Spot is a big storm, twice as wide as Earth, which has been churning on Jupiter for at the least 150 years. NASA's Juno spacecraft flew over the terrific pink Spot on Monday to give mankind its closest-ever seem to be at the 10,000-mile-large storm.
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