Juno also snapped pictures of Jupiter's potato-shaped inner moon, named Amalthea. With a radius of only 52 miles (84 ...
NASA’s Juno spacecraft captured jaw-dropping images during a flyby of Jupiter, revealing swirling clouds that look ...
NASA’s Juno spacecraft has returned new images of Jupiter after its 66th close flyby as it enters the final year of its ...
NASA’s Juno spacecraft has just released stunning images of Jupiter, captured during its 66th flyby of the largest and oldest ...
Since NASA's Juno spacecraft entered Jupiter's orbit in July 2016 and began transmitting image data, the world has gotten ...
Onboard Juno is its famed camera, dubbed "JunoCam." A two megapixel visible light camera, JunoCam is designed "to study the ...
This was Juno’s 66th perijove. Each one of these close flybys has added a wealth of knowledge to our understanding of Jupiter ...
Jaw-dropping new images show Jupiter in eye-popping detail. NASA’s Juno spacecraft captured incredible views of the stormy ...
October 23, 2024, saw the Juno spacecraft’s most recent perijove, or the point where it’s closest to Jupiter. The orbiter’s color camera (the JunoCam) caught detailed views of the planet’s tumultuous ...
"One of the spacecraft's instruments is JunoCam, a two-megapixel camera designed to capture the dynamics of Jupiter's clouds and satellites," Dmitry Bisikalo said MOSCOW, November 7. /TASS/.
Therefore, the image of Jupiter circulating on social media was a real photograph taken by NASA's Juno spacecraft, but was modified to enhance its colors and contrast, as encouraged by NASA.