Seeing Jupiter at the poles really changes the appearance of the cloud formations - we're used to seeing the front shits showing the banding, Great Red Spot & so on that these polar images look like a different world.
That Reddit post about the descent into Jupiter is pretty cool too - being able to sample matter like that would be amazing science.
We've already sent Gallileo into Jupiter
http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/7776887/?reload=trueSo this high tech interplanetary space probe built by NASA sends grey photos? I'm confused... why not in color?
Thanks for the replies, guys. That was informative.Data storage on the spacecraft and transfer back to Earth is VERY limited, so taking pictures in monochrome is more efficient when you don't particularly care about the colours, just the general features. Plus, monochrome pictures can be recolored easily using information from images taken with Earth-based telescopes and other instrumentation data from the spacecraft such as spectroscopy data.
You gotta remember that almost all spacecraft in operation now is working with technology at least 5-10 years old.
Actually scratch that. Today I learned something new!http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/7776887/?reload=true
Because color cameras that are radiation hardened (able to function in radioactive environments, ie outer space) are still being researched.
My god
Being under layers of gas might do it.How can a South Pole be elusive?
Wow, that is stunningly beautiful. Wish I could see that in person.
Anyone else get a little creeped out by seeing other planets like this? I think it's just the awe from seeing an Alien world. Plus with gas giants they're just so big, it's literally awesome.
Plus that south pole picture literally looks like some mad lovecraftian entity.
Jupiter has shrugged off worse than anything we could ever throw at it"
I'd go with ya!That would be terrifying to me, to be so far away from humans, to be so insignificant in such a large dark space.
Yessss. The best thing about the movie is that its climactic "action" setpiece is basically (literally?) cosmological physics porn.Everyone should watch 2010. Not only is it underrated hard Sci fi (to a point) it's incredibly timely again re. Russia.
And the main character and monster...is Jupiter. It treats the world with appropriate awe and terror.
And yet you can fit all the other planets in between the Earth and the Moon.
Jupiter is the biggest fart in the solar system.Looks like a whole bunch of gas
I hope they're immune to radiation.
Never learnt this at schoolAnd yet you can fit all the other planets in between the Earth and the Moon.
Yessss. The best thing about the movie is that its climactic "action" setpiece is basically (literally?) cosmological physics porn.
Juno's next flyby of Jupiter should happen around May 19. But Juno won't fly forever.
NASA will plunge the spacecraft into Jupiter's clouds in 2018 or 2019.
This will prevent it from spreading any bacteria from Earth on the gas giant's icy, ocean-filled moons like Europa and Ganymede.
What would happen if we did spread bacteria on the moons?
We already tried..Than we nuke Jupiter....if thats even possible.
What would happen if we did spread bacteria on the moons?
We would have spread bacteria to the moons?
We fuck up a perfectly good moon.
Whatever, space in general is scary as shit. All of it. The farther you get from all the spiders, the scarier it gets.I'll be in my bunk. SHITTING MYSELF.
Can bacteria even survive there?
Even if they did, what would be the downside? I mean it's just bacteria, how could they fuck shit up?
I'm sorry I'm a noob
And yet you can fit all the other planets in between the Earth and the Moon.
What is it going to take to get someone to probe Uranus? It's so long overdue.
*Edit* - DAMNIT SO LATE
Jupiter is one of those things that is so big and alien and shit that my brain goes hnnngggg and seizes up. There are no words for what things like Jupiter mean to a human, other than raw science measurements. Space in general does this to me. Fascinating and deeply unnerving.
Like trying to kill an elephant with a toothpick.Than we nuke Jupiter....if thats even possible.
This looks like bacteria or something through a microscope.
I always find it amazing how much the universe mimics itself no matter the scale.
Those moons are considered to be the most likely places to find life beyond Earth in our solar system.What would happen if we did spread bacteria on the moons?