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NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope snaps photos of changing weather on Uranus, Jupiter

 


Observations of celestial bodies are possible through Hubble, which was launched in 2014, and NASA's Juno, which orbits Jupiter built by Lockheed Martin.

Hubble, NASA's space telescope, has been tracking the development and history of various galaxies, black holes, dark matter, and more since its deployment in 1990. The Hubble Telescope has also been monitoring the interplanetary weather of the gaseous planets beyond our solar system. Today, Hubble has captured an incredible discovery about Jupiter and Uranus.

The telescope's Outer Planet Atmospheres Legacy (OPAL) Program has been providing us with interesting, ever-evolving pictures of the large planets since its inception in 2014. Hubble has shown that the northern low latitudes of Jupiter experience more severe storms than the rest of the planet, with a unique pattern of alternating storms creating a "vortex street" in astronomical parlance.

Since 2014, when the telescope's Outer Planet Atmospheres Legacy (OPAL) Program began, it has given us intriguing, ever-changing images of the huge planets and their atmospheres. Jupiter's weather has been shown to be particularly tumultuous by the Hubble programme, with the planet showing a peculiar pattern of alternating storms that form a "vortex street" in astronomical parlance at low northern latitudes.


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