This is seniors sex videosnot just another sublime image of the largest storm in the solar system, Jupiter's Great Red Spot.
Look closer… a little closer…
Come on, you're going to have to try harder than that. Get in there.
Do you see it now? That's not a speck of dust on NASA's Juno spacecraft camera. That's a moon, orbiting its enormous mother planet in space.
The teeny tiny moon is Amalthea, and though it was caught zipping in front of the very ruddy eye of Jupiter's long-lived high pressure zone, astronomers say this moon is in fact the reddest object in the solar system. Scientists think its hue is caused by sulfur from the nearby Jovian moon Io, a world with active volcanoes.
SEE ALSO: Saturn apparently has 145 moons. So eat it, Jupiter.This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
The images released this week were taken as the spacecraft swooped about 165,000 miles above Jupiter’s clouds in March during its 59th close flyby. Citizen scientist Gerald Eichstädt processed the probe's raw camera datato enhance the clarity of the pictures.
Junohas an instrument, dubbed JunoCam, that was designed not just to take great closeup photos of Jupiter but to engage the public. The science team allows citizens to process the camera's images and polls the crowd for what to focus on next.
Juno has been orbiting Jupiter for over seven years. The spacecraft is studying the origin and evolution of Jupiter, looking for its core, mapping its magnetic field, measuring water and ammonia in the atmosphere, watching for its auroras, and homing in on Jupiter’s moons and dust rings.
During its primary mission, the spacecraft collected data on the gas giant's atmosphere and interior. Among its discoveries was finding that the planet's atmospheric weather layer extends way beyond its water clouds.
After completing 35 orbits, the spacecraft transitioned to studying the entire system around Jupiter, including its rings and moons. The extended mission will continue for another year or until the spacecraft dies. Juno will eventually burn up in Jupiter's atmosphere as its trajectory erodes. The spacecraft is not at risk of crashing into and possibly contaminating Jupiter's moons, some of which may be habitable worlds.
Amalthea, just one of Jupiter's 95 official moons, was first discovered by Edward Emerson Barnard in 1892. It is about 100 miles wide and clumsily shaped like a potato because it lacks the mass to form into a more symmetrical sphere. Almost 25 years ago, scientists got to see this little moon up close with the help of NASA's Galileo spacecraft, which revealed a pell-mell world of craters, hills, and valleys.
Amalthea is within the orbit of Io, the closest of Jupiter's four large moons, along with three other oddly shaped mini moons: Metis, Adrastea, and Thebe. It's so close to Jupiter, in fact, it only takes Amalthea half of a day on Earth to circle its planet.
This moon is a mysterious little place in the solar system. Scientists have discovered that it gives off more heat than it gets from the sun — perhaps a result of Jupiter's magnetic field stimulating electric currents within its core or the planet's gravity causing tidal stresses.
AI fraud warning: Voice clones are turbocharging scams, FTC Chair warnsBookstores Take a Beating, and Other News by Sadie SteinThessaly’s Ideal Bookshelf by Sadie Stein10 moments that defined the first decade of InstagramPostcard from San Francisco by Sadie Stein(Topical) Poem of the Day by Sadie SteinComedian hilariously imitates the fly on Mike Pence's headIs Nothing Sacred? The Brontë Chapel Is Sacked by Sadie SteinIs Nothing Sacred? The Brontë Chapel Is Sacked by Sadie SteinWhen Are You Gonna Get Over This: An Interview with Jim Shepard by Tim SmallIntroducing the Paris Review App! by The Paris ReviewWordle today: Here's the answer and hints for June 2Instagram attempts to explain 'shadowbanning', but creators still aren't happy'Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for June 1Instagram attempts to explain 'shadowbanning', but creators still aren't happy'Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for June 2The Mo Yan Culture Experience Zone, and Other News by Sadie SteinWhat is the California Journalism Preservation Act?“The Lottery”: PGLetter from a Haunted House: Part 2 by Amie Barrodale Half of all active iPhones have made the leap to iOS 13 Critics gush over first 'The Lighthouse' explained: What did it all mean? Chris Pratt may have a cameo in 'A Quiet Place 2' for a very good reason 'His Dark Materials' bosses confirm the new series will be just as dark as the books Kellogg's releases limited edition cereal box to stem LGBTQ bullying Google Pixel 4's face unlock will get more secure but not straight away Lady Gaga posts Instagram recovering from fan dropping her off a stage Report: Facebook's in 'The Simpsons' parodied 'Stranger Things' and of course Lisa was Eleven Oprah gifted an iPhone to a fan after dunking on his cracked screen An Aussie airline successfully tested a nonstop NYC–Sydney flight 'Molly of Denali' centers Indigenous perspectives in unique, fun show The best celebrity hair of the 2010s that inspired who we wanted to be HBO's 'Watchmen' is off to a brilliant start: Review Piers Morgan simply does not realize J.K. Rowling masterfully subtweeted him HBO's 'Catherine the Great' can't scratch the surface of Catherine the Great The Mercedes Everything coming to Hulu in November 2019 Teen becomes talk of the neighborhood when taquito gets confused for cigar
3.2772s , 10522.0546875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【seniors sex videos】,Prosperous Times Information Network