Connect with us

Technology

Nasa reveals stunning image of storm WIDER than the Earth brewing on Jupiter

NASA has posted a stunning image of two huge storms brewing on Jupiter to its Instagram account.

The image has already racked up over one million likes and features a storm so large the Earth could fit inside it.

NASAStorms can get so large on Jupiter that they become larger than our planet[/caption]

The amazing photo was actually captured late last year by Nasa’s Juno spacecraft.

The exact scale of the two storms is unknown but experts think the lower storm was so big it could have fit the Earth inside it.

Nasa said: “Two large rotating storms brew on Jupiter’s surface in this image captured by @NASASolarSystem Juno spacecraft’s visible-light imager, JunoCam, on Juno’s 38th pass at about 3,815 miles (6,140 km) altitude.

“Bright “pop-up” clouds are visible above the lower storm, casting shadows on the cloud bank below.

“As small as they appear in comparison to the large storm below, these clouds are typically 31 miles (50 km) across.”

The image is only just getting the attention it deserves on Nasa’s Instagram account but it was taken by the JunoCam on November 29, 2021.


Juno is Nasa’s most distant planetary orbiter craft.

It actually completed its initial mission in 2016 but is now on an extended mission to observe and photograph the most distant planets in our Solar System.

Jupiter is quite a stormy planet and it has a famous ongoing storm called the Great Red Spot.

It’s one of Jupiter’s most talked about features and spans 9,800 miles end to end.

In comparison, Earth has a diameter of around 8,000 miles.

Scientists are keeping an eye on the Great Red Spot because it’s shrinking and they don’t know why.

In other news, Mercedes-Benz has finally revealed its Vision EQXX electric car.

It’s time to say goodbye to BlackBerry phones as the company has pulled the plug on its once extremely popular handsets.

And, an urgent Android warning has gone out to millions of users after malicious apps were detected in the Samsung app store.

We pay for your stories!

Do you have a story for The US Sun team?

Email us at exclusive@the-sun.com or call 212 416 4552.

Like us on Facebook at www.facebook.com/TheSunUS and follow us from our main Twitter account at @TheSunUS