The iconic feature likely formed at least 190 years ago, making it the longest-lived vortex known in the solar system. A new ...
This image of Jupiter from NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope in July 2022 shows stunning details of ... [+] the majestic planet in infrared light—including the "Great Red Spot." Look at any ...
The Great Red Spot is an anticyclonic storm. It rotates counterclockwise in Jupiter’s southern hemisphere. This storm system ...
Jupiter's Great Red Spot is one of the most famous and spectacular sights in the Solar Systems. Wider than the diameter of the Earth, the spot is a giant vortex of winds up to 400 kilometers per hour.
(CNN)-- Everything about Jupiter is super-sized, including its colorful, turbulent atmosphere. But there's fresh evidence that one of the planet's most recognizable features, the Great Red Spot ...
Scientists are keen to learn its secrets and Juno provides the key "For hundreds of years scientists have been observing, wondering and theorising about Jupiter's Great Red Spot," Scott Bolton ...
Jupiter is also famous for its incredible storms, the largest of which is the Great Red Spot. The rust-colored storm is an absolute giant, but it’s actually a lot smaller today than it once was.
The combination reveals Jupiter's characteristic Great Red Spot - a cyclonic storm large enough to engulf the Earth - in stunning detail. Also visible in the photos is the Great Red Spot's smaller ...
A new study predicts that even though it’s not any less thick, Jupiter’s Great Red Spot is definitely much smaller than 350 years ago. Scientists will compare their modelled estimates to Juno ...
A new study suggests Vincent van Gogh showed a deep, intuitive understanding of the mathematical structure of turbulence in ...
Jupiter's most recognisable feature - its Great Red Spot - is getting smaller. The Great Red Spot is the biggest, and longest-lasting storm in our Solar System, and has been studied from Earth for ...
Jupiter's Great Red Spot There is evidence to suggest that this peculiar marking is the top of a "Taylor column": a stagnant region above a bump or depression at the bottom of a circulating fluid ...