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The most interesting object in JunoCam’s images was Jupiter’s third-largest moon Io, which it got within 66,000 miles/106,000 kilometers of.
Intriguing Jupiter Moons Shine in Most Detailed Images Ever Taken From Earth Amanda Kooser Freelance writer Amanda C. Kooser covers gadgets and tech news with a twist for CNET.
The images—taken using Juno’s Jovian Infrared Auroral Mapper (JIRAM) instrument on December 26, 2019, but only published now—are the first infrared images of the moon’s north pole.
Jupiter and its largest moons are unmistakable in this amazing photo by photographer Greg Diesel Walck of North Carolina on the night of Jan. 21, 2013, during an extreme close encounter. Click ...
Jupiter’s third-largest moon Io is the most volcanically active world in our solar system. New radio images by the ALMA telescope array show the direct effect of this volcanic activity on the ...
Jupiter and its moons are a diverse and dynamic subdivision of our solar system’s neighborhood, one that NASA’s Juno spacecraft has been visiting since 2016.
NASA's Juno spacecraft has sent back stunning photos of Jupiter, including colorful, chaotic storms swirling through the planet's atmosphere. Juno completed its 66th close flyby (also referred to ...
Astrophotographer Cory Poole caught Jupiter, Venus and the crescent moon over Redding, CA, on the morning of July 15, 2012. Veteran night sky photographer Giuseppe Petricca of Pisa, Italy, snapped ...
(CNN) - New images of Jupiter are now available, thanks to some new technology from NASA. NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope team unveiled the mission’s first science-quality images featuring Jupiter’s ...