Here you will find the course calendar (below) and LabArchives link containing course assignments. Click the "+ Google" button at the bottom right of the calendar to add the calendar to your google account and set it up for phone or email reminders. Alternatively, you can follow @mrvernonied on the Twitters and it will auto-Tweet a reminder to you the day before.

Wednesday, September 14, 2016

The North and South of Jupiter


A wide, looping orbit brought Juno close to Jupiter on August 27. As the spacecraft swung around the giant planet's poles JunoCam acquired these premier direct polar views, a change from the usual nearly equatorial perspective of outbound spacecraft and the telescopes of planet Earth. The sunlit side of Jupiter's north polar region (left) was imaged about 125,000 kilometers from the cloud tops, two hours before Juno's closest approach. An hour after close approach the south polar region was captured from 94,500 kilometers away. Strikingly different from the alternating light-colored zones and darker belts girdling more familiar equatorial regions, the polar region clouds appear more convoluted and mottled by many clockwise and counterclockwise rotating storm systems. Another 35 close orbital flybys are planned during the Juno mission. via NASA http://ift.tt/2cZvkxY