Jupiter in striking shades of blue (Picture)

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Jupiter in striking shades of blue (Picture)
Jupiter in striking shades of blue (Picture)
Jupiter in striking shades of blue (Picture)
Jupiter in striking shades of blue (Picture)

A stunning new Nasa image shows raging storms on Jupiter with clouds that stretch for thousands of miles.

The image, taken by Juno of the swirling, twisted cloud tops of Jupiter, is a seriously awesome sight. Taken at a height of nearly 12,000 miles above the planet’s iconic storms, the photo is a reminder that we don’t even have to leave the Solar System to see some truly awe-inspiring wonders of nature.

It’s been processed by citizen scientists Gerald Eichstädt and Seán Doran to bring out the features a bit more, but those storms and swirls you can see are very much real.

And what a wondrous vista it gives us. Nothing on Earth comes close to the complexity and beauty of Jupiter’s storms, intertwining with each other in the planet’s atmosphere to give us this swirling mess of beauty.

The image was taken from a distance of just 18,906 kilometers (11,747 miles) above the surface of Jupiter’s clouds, approximately the distance from New York to Perth in Australia, NASA helpfully tells us.

It shows us a cloud system in the northern hemisphere of Jupiter colored in blues and grays, as seen on October 24, 2017. It was taken during Juno’s ninth close flyby of the planet, and the scale in the image is 12.5 kilometers (7.75 miles) per pixel.

“Because of the Juno-Jupiter-Sun angle when the spacecraft captured this image, the higher-altitude clouds can be seen casting shadows on their surroundings,” said NASA.

“The behavior is most easily observable in the whitest regions in the image, but also in a few isolated spots in both the bottom and right areas of the image.”

The image was snapped by the JunoCam instrument onboard the Juno spacecraft. This has been responsible for plenty of fantastic images, which members of the public frequently process to bring out their glorious colors.

We’ve recently been treated to incredible images of the whole planet, and even some of its moons. We’ve seen shadows from those moons cast on the planet, and we got a look at the incredible south pole of Jupiter thanks to Juno, which is unlike anything we’ve seen before.

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