Fichier:PIA09247 The Little Red Spot - Closest View Yet.jpg

Le contenu de la page n’est pas pris en charge dans d’autres langues.
Une page de Wikipédia, l'encyclopédie libre.

Fichier d’origine(1 740 × 1 940 pixels, taille du fichier : 179 kio, type MIME : image/jpeg)

Ce fichier et sa description proviennent de Wikimedia Commons.

Description

Description
English: This is a mosaic of three New Horizons images of Jupiter's Little Red Spot, taken with the spacecraft's Long Range Reconnaissance Imager (LORRI) camera at 17:41 Universal Time on February 26 from a range of 3.5 million kilometers (2.1 million miles). The image scale is 17 kilometers (11 miles) per pixel, and the area covered measures 33,000 kilometers (20,000 miles) from top to bottom, two and one-half times the diameter of Earth.

The Little Red Spot, a smaller cousin of the famous Great Red Spot, formed in the past decade from the merger of three smaller Jovian storms, and is now the second-largest storm on Jupiter. About a year ago its color, formerly white, changed to a reddish shade similar to the Great Red Spot, perhaps because it is now powerful enough to dredge up reddish material from deeper inside Jupiter. These are the most detailed images ever taken of the Little Red Spot since its formation, and will be combined with even sharper images taken by New Horizons 10 hours later to map circulation patterns around and within the storm.

LORRI took the images as the Sun was about to set on the Little Red Spot. The LORRI camera was designed to look at Pluto, where sunlight is much fainter than it is at Jupiter, so the images would have been overexposed if LORRI had looked at the storm when it was illuminated by the noonday Sun. The dim evening illumination helped the LORRI camera obtain well-exposed images. The New Horizons team used predictions made by amateur astronomers in 2006, based on their observations of the motion of the Little Red Spot with backyard telescopes, to help them accurately point LORRI at the storm.

These are among a handful of Jupiter system images already returned by New Horizons during its close approach to Jupiter. Most of the data being gathered by the spacecraft are stored onboard and will be downlinked to Earth during March and April 2007.
Date (published 2 avril 2007)
Source Catalog page · Full-res (JPEG · TIFF)
Auteur NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory/Southwest Research Institute
Cette image ou vidéo a été cataloguée par le
Jet Propulsion Lab
de la
National Aeronautics and Space Administration
(NASA) des États-Unis sous Photo ID : PIA09247.

Ce bandeau n’indique rien sur le statut de l’œuvre au regard du droit d'auteur. Un bandeau de droit d’auteur est requis. Voir Commons:À propos des licences pour plus d’informations.
Autres langues :
This media is a product of the
New Horizons mission
Credit and attribution belongs to the Long-Range Reconnaissance Imager (LORRI) team, NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory/Southwest Research Institute

Conditions d’utilisation

Public domain Ce fichier provient de la NASA. Sauf exception, les documents créés par la NASA ne sont pas soumis à copyright. Pour plus d'informations, voir la politique de copyright de la NASA.
Attention :

Historique du fichier

Cliquer sur une date et heure pour voir le fichier tel qu'il était à ce moment-là.

Date et heureVignetteDimensionsUtilisateurCommentaire
actuel21 janvier 2017 à 19:22Vignette pour la version du 21 janvier 2017 à 19:221 740 × 1 940 (179 kio)PhilipTerryGrahamUser created page with UploadWizard

La page suivante utilise ce fichier :

Usage global du fichier

Les autres wikis suivants utilisent ce fichier :

  • Utilisation sur no.wikipedia.org