Washington, D.C.:NASA Hubble Space Telescope on August 25 has captured the latest image of Jupiter when it was just 406 million miles away from Earth. The researchers found a remarkable new storm brewing and a cousin of the famous Great Red Spot region gearing up to change color again.
The snapshot appears at mid-northern latitudes as a bright, white, stretched-out storm traveling around the planet at 560 kilometers per hour. This single plume erupted on August 18, and ground-based observers have discovered two more that appeared later at the same latitude.
Hubble Space Telescope shows that the Great Red Spot, rolling counterclockwise in the planet’s southern hemisphere, is plowing into the clouds ahead of it, forming a cascade of white and beige ribbons.
The Great Red Spot is currently an exceptionally rich in red color, with its core and outermost band appearing deeper red.
Further, the researchers said “the Great Red Spot now measures about 9,800 miles across, big enough to swallow Earth. The super-storm is still shrinking as noted in telescopic observations dating back to 1930, but the reason for its dwindling size is a complete mystery.”