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An astronomer's map of a heat wave on Jupiter helped solve the planet's "energy crisis" mystery.; Solar plasma triggered an aurora at Jupiter's north pole, which sent a heat wave spilling down the ...
New radio wave images made with the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) provide a unique view of Jupiter's atmosphere down to fifty kilometers below the planet's visible (ammonia ...
Flat map of Jupiter in radio waves with ALMA (top) and visible light with the Hubble Space Telescope (bottom). The eruption in the South Equatorial Belt is visible in both images.
"Jupiter's rotation once every 10 hours usually blurs radio maps, because these maps take many hours to observe," says co-author Robert Sault of the University of Melbourne in Australia.
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