k Jupiter, Hubble Space Telescope image Hubble Space Telescope image of Jupiter. Jupiter is a gas giant planet, the fifth planet from the Sun and is the largest in the solar system. The Great Red Spot and bands of clouds are seen in Jupiters turbulent atmosphere. The colours, and their changes, indicate ongoing processes in Jupiters atmosphere. The bands are created by differences in the thickness and height of the ammonia ice clouds. The bands of clouds, which flow in opposite directions at various latitudes, result from different atmospheric pressures. Lighter bands rise higher and have thicker clouds than the darker bands. Composite image captured by Hubbles Wide Field Camera 3 when Jupiter was 701 million kilometres from Earth., Photo by NASA, ESA, and M.H. Wong UC BerkeleySCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY Stock Photo - Afloimages
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Jupiter, Hubble Space Telescope image Hubble Space Telescope image of Jupiter. Jupiter is a gas giant planet, the fifth planet from the Sun and is the largest in the solar system. The Great Red Spot and bands of clouds are seen in Jupiter s turbulent atmosphere. The colours, and their changes, indicate ongoing processes in Jupiter s atmosphere. The bands are created by differences in the thickness and height of the ammonia ice clouds. The bands of clouds, which flow in opposite directions at various latitudes, result from different atmospheric pressures. Lighter bands rise higher and have thicker clouds than the darker bands. Composite image captured by Hubble s Wide Field Camera 3 when Jupiter was 701 million kilometres from Earth., Photo by NASA, ESA, and M.H. Wong  UC Berkeley  SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY
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Jupiter, Hubble Space Telescope image

Hubble Space Telescope image of Jupiter. Jupiter is a gas giant planet, the fifth planet from the Sun and is the largest in the solar system. The Great Red Spot and bands of clouds are seen in Jupiter's turbulent atmosphere. The colours, and their changes, indicate ongoing processes in Jupiter's atmosphere. The bands are created by differences in the thickness and height of the ammonia ice clouds. The bands of clouds, which flow in opposite directions at various latitudes, result from different atmospheric pressures. Lighter bands rise higher and have thicker clouds than the darker bands. Composite image captured by Hubble's Wide Field Camera 3 when Jupiter was 701 million kilometres from Earth., Photo by NASA, ESA, and M.H. Wong (UC Berkeley)/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY

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