During its 61st close flyby of Jupiter on May 12, 2024, NASA’s Juno spacecraft captured a stunning, color-enhanced image of the giant planet’s northern hemisphere. This detailed view reveals the chaotic clouds and cyclonic storms in an area known as a folded filamentary region. In these regions, the zonal jets responsible for Jupiter’s distinctive banded patterns break down, leading to rapidly evolving turbulent patterns and cloud structures.

Citizen scientist Gary Eason utilized raw data from the JunoCam instrument to process the image, employing digital techniques to enhance its color and clarity. When the image was captured, Juno was situated around 18,000 miles (29,000 kilometers) above Jupiter’s cloud tops, positioned at approximately 68 degrees north latitude.

Juno is a NASA spacecraft specifically created to investigate Jupiter, the largest planet in our solar system. Launched on August 5, 2011, its mission is to better understand Jupiter’s composition, gravity field, magnetic field, and polar magnetosphere. Additionally, it aims to uncover clues about the planet’s formation, providing insights into the early solar system.

Part of NASA’s New Frontiers program, Juno explores the solar system with frequent, medium-sized spacecraft missions. Notably, Juno is powered by solar panels, making it the first solar-powered probe to operate so far from the Sun. Juno began orbiting Jupiter on July 4, 2016, and has since been conducting close flybys over the planet’s cloud tops to collect data. The spacecraft is equipped with a suite of scientific instruments, including a microwave radiometer to peer beneath the dense cloud cover and various cameras and sensors to map the planet’s magnetic and gravitational fields.

Juno’s findings have provided unprecedented insights into Jupiter’s atmosphere, uncovering intricate structures within the planet’s storms, bands, and auroras. Initially, Juno’s mission was set to conclude in 2018, but it has been extended several times, allowing for ongoing exploration and discoveries around Jupiter. The spacecraft continues to deliver valuable data, deepening our understanding of this massive planet and its role in the solar system’s history.