The spot we see today isn’t the same one the Italian astronomer Cassini discovered centuries ago, research shows.
Jupiter’s Great Red Spot (GRS) has fascinated astronomers for over 150 years. This massive storm, large enough to engulf ...
A pair of massive thunderstorms have been spotted swirling in Jupiter's "South Equatorial Belt" and are likely unleashing ...
The James Webb telescope has focused its attention on an oddball space rock lurking between Jupiter and Neptune. The unusual ...
Despite its moniker, the Great Red spot isn’t all that red but much like a pale pink. It’s hard to spot it on Jupiter’s southern hemisphere unless you have a moderate to large telescope and ...
If you have a telescope, or access to one ... help you identify some of the features in Jupiter’s atmosphere. If you don’t see the Great Red Spot when you first look, wait a few hours and ...
According to NASA, using binoculars is the best way to look at Jupiter, and if you have access to a telescope, you may even be able to see its Great Red Spot. Get your game on! Whether you’re ...
Every night is a good night to look through a telescope (provided it’s not cloudy), but if you’re looking for an excuse, Jupiter is lining ... to the brightest spots in the sky, you’ll ...
The Hubble Space Telescope has spent more than ... Besides its enormity, Jupiter is also known for its Great Red Spot. The unmistakable swirling red vortex on the gas giant's face is the largest ...
Jupiter’s Great Red Spot—a rotating storm that is so large ... Though the Great Red Spot appears stationary and unchanging through a telescope, an October study, published in the Planetary ...
Astrophotographer Michael Karrer captured the stunning new images on Nov. 30 using an 8-inch Celestron telescope from ... like Jupiter's famous Great Red Spot, and will instead get pulled apart ...