Fichier:Hubble’s observation of Jupiter in 2021 (51688147562).jpg
Fichier d’origine (1 483 × 1 483 pixels, taille du fichier : 681 kio, type MIME : image/jpeg)
Ce fichier et sa description proviennent de Wikimedia Commons.
Description
DescriptionHubble’s observation of Jupiter in 2021 (51688147562).jpg |
Hubble’s 2021 image of Jupiter tracks the ever-changing landscape of its turbulent atmosphere, where several new storms are making their mark and the planet’s equator has changed colour yet again. Hubble’s 4 September photo puts the giant planet’s tumultuous atmosphere on full display. The planet’s equatorial zone is now a deep orange hue, which researchers are calling unusual. While the equator has departed from its traditional white or beige appearance for a few years now, scientists were surprised to find a deeper orange in Hubble’s recent imaging, where they were expecting the zone to cloud up again. Just above the equator, researchers note the appearance of several new storms, nicknamed “barges.” These elongated, deeply structured red cells can be defined as cyclonic vortices, which vary in appearance. While some of the storms are sharply defined and clear, others are fuzzy and hazy. This difference in appearance is caused by the physical properties within the clouds of the vortices. Researchers note that a feature dubbed “Red Spot Jr.” (Oval BA), below the Great Red Spot where Hubble just discovered winds are speeding up, is still a darker beige colour, and is joined by several additional white, cyclonic storms to the south. Credits: NASA, ESA, A. Simon (Goddard Space Flight Center), and M.H. Wong (University of California, Berkeley) and the OPAL team; <a href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/" rel="noreferrer nofollow">CC BY 4.0</a> |
Date | |
Source | Hubble’s observation of Jupiter in 2021 |
Auteur | European Space Agency |
Conditions d’utilisation
- Vous êtes libre :
- de partager – de copier, distribuer et transmettre cette œuvre
- d’adapter – de modifier cette œuvre
- Sous les conditions suivantes :
- paternité – Vous devez donner les informations appropriées concernant l'auteur, fournir un lien vers la licence et indiquer si des modifications ont été faites. Vous pouvez faire cela par tout moyen raisonnable, mais en aucune façon suggérant que l’auteur vous soutient ou approuve l’utilisation que vous en faites.
Cette image a été originellement postée sur Flickr par europeanspaceagency à l'adresse https://flickr.com/photos/37472264@N04/51688147562. Elle a été passée en revue le 13 juin 2022 par le robot FlickreviewR 2, qui a confirmé qu'elle se trouvait sous licence cc-by-2.0. |
13 juin 2022
Éléments décrits dans ce fichier
dépeint
Valeur sans élément de Wikidata
18 novembre 2021
Historique du fichier
Cliquer sur une date et heure pour voir le fichier tel qu'il était à ce moment-là.
Date et heure | Vignette | Dimensions | Utilisateur | Commentaire | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
actuel | 13 juin 2022 à 15:18 | 1 483 × 1 483 (681 kio) | Astromessier | Transferred from Flickr via #flickr2commons |
Utilisation du fichier
Les 4 pages suivantes utilisent ce fichier :
Métadonnées
Ce fichier contient des informations supplémentaires, probablement ajoutées par l'appareil photo numérique ou le numériseur utilisé pour le créer.
Si le fichier a été modifié depuis son état original, certains détails peuvent ne pas refléter entièrement l'image modifiée.
Orientation | Normale |
---|---|
Résolution horizontale | 72 pt/po |
Résolution verticale | 72 pt/po |
Logiciel utilisé | Adobe Photoshop 22.4 (Macintosh) |
Date de modification du fichier | 4 novembre 2021 à 13:57 |
Positionnement YCbCr | Centré |
Version d’EXIF | 2.32 |
Date et heure de génération des données | 18 novembre 2021 à 19:00 |
Date et heure de la numérisation | 7 septembre 2021 à 12:02 |
Signification de chaque composante |
|
Version de FlashPix prise en charge | 1 |
Espace colorimétrique | Non calibré |
Version d’IIM | 4 |
Titre court | Hubble’s Observation of Jupiter in 2021 |
Crédit ou fournisseur | NASA, ESA, A. Simon (Goddard Spa |
Source | ESA/Hubble |
Titre de l’image | Hubble’s 2021 image of Jupiter tracks the ever-changing landscape of its turbulent atmosphere, where several new storms are making their mark and the planet’s equator has changed colour yet again. Hubble’s 4 September photo puts the giant planet’s tumultuous atmosphere on full display. The planet’s equatorial zone is now a deep orange hue, which researchers are calling unusual. While the equator has departed from its traditional white or beige appearance for a few years now, scientists were surprised to find a deeper orange in Hubble’s recent imaging, where they were expecting the zone to cloud up again. Just above the equator, researchers note the appearance of several new storms, nicknamed “barges.” These elongated, deeply structured red cells can be defined as cyclonic vortices, which vary in appearance. While some of the storms are sharply defined and clear, others are fuzzy and hazy. This difference in appearance is caused by the physical properties within the clouds of the vortices. Researchers note that a feature dubbed “Red Spot Jr.” (Oval BA), below the Great Red Spot where Hubble just discovered winds are speeding up, is still a darker beige colour, and is joined by several additional white, cyclonic storms to the south. |
Bits par composante |
|
Hauteur | 1 483 px |
Largeur | 1 483 px |
Composition des pixels | RVB |
Nombre de composantes | 3 |
Coordonnées de contact |
ESA Office, Space Telescope Science Institute, 3700 San Martin Dr 21218 Baltimore, MD United States |
Éditeur de la publication | ESA/Hubble |
Date de la dernière modification des métadonnées | 4 novembre 2021 à 09:57 |
Identifiant unique du document original | adobe:docid:photoshop:195454c5-6e3f-d346-9ae8-58c198fa4122 |
Conditions d’utilisation |
|
Commentaire de fichier JPEG | Hubble’s 2021 image of Jupiter tracks the ever-changing landscape of its turbulent atmosphere, where several new storms are making their mark and the planet’s equator has changed colour yet again. Hubble’s 4 September photo puts the giant planet’s tumultuous atmosphere on full display. The planet’s equatorial zone is now a deep orange hue, which researchers are calling unusual. While the equator has departed from its traditional white or beige appearance for a few years now, scientists were surprised to find a deeper orange in Hubble’s recent imaging, where they were expecting the zone to cloud up again. Just above the equator, researchers note the appearance of several new storms, nicknamed “barges.” These elongated, deeply structured red cells can be defined as cyclonic vortices, which vary in appearance. While some of the storms are sharply defined and clear, others are fuzzy and hazy. This difference in appearance is caused by the physical properties within the clouds of the vortices. Researchers note that a feature dubbed “Red Spot Jr.” (Oval BA), below the Great Red Spot where Hubble just discovered winds are speeding up, is still a darker beige colour, and is joined by several additional white, cyclonic storms to the south. |