A new view of Jupiter takes the usual shot of the planet's Great Red Spot and Watch Swap (2024) full movieflips it on its side.
The captivating new perspective comes from an image created by two citizen scientists who used data from the JunoCam on NASA's Juno spacecraft that's been in orbit for more than a year studying the planet, according to NASA.
The north end of the planet is shown on the left side of the new photo (above) and that's where the Great Red Spot rages.
The image comes from the recent batch of photos and data from the Juno spacecraft's fly-by on July 10. The Great Red Spot, a 10,000 mile-wide storm, had quite a photo session when the spacecraft flew 5,600 miles above it.
For this newer image, created by Gerald Eichstädt and Seán Doran, the spacecraft was 10,274 miles above the planet and its clouds.
The Great Red Spot is usually photographed on top, like this photo below, so the storm gets a different vantage point in this latest image.
No matter what angle, it's quite the sight.
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