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Science

Jupiter's Great Red Spot ready for close-up as Juno spacecraft goes 'screaming' past

On Monday, NASA's Juno spacecraft will peer into a storm on Jupiter that's at least 350 years old.

Data on 'the king planet and the king storm' will be available to citizens

Jupiter, with different shades of browns and white bands and a large egg-shaped storm, hangs in the blackness of space, with its moon Ganymede.
NASA's Juno spacecraft will explore Jupiter's Great Red Spot, an enormous, long-lived storm, on Monday. Ganymede, one of the planet's many moons, hangs below. (NASA/ESA and E. Karkoschka/Reuters)

This storm has been raging for at least 350 years, and soon humanity will get its first close-up look.

On Monday NASA's Juno spacecraft, in orbit around Jupiter since last July, will fly over the planet's giant storm, dubbed the Great Red Spot, taking high-definition photos and making scientific observations.

"We'refinally going to fly directly over that spot, and we're going to get our first close-up look at it," Scott Bolton, Juno's principalinvestigator from Southwest Research Institute, told CBC News.

"When we are screaming past at our closest approach point we're just a few thousandmiles above it."

Juno's orbit around the biggest planet in our solar system takes roughly 53 days. Most of the time the spacecraft is far from Jupiter, but on one of those 53 days, Juno flies extremely close to the massive planet, travelling from the north pole to the south pole around 24,000 km/h injust under an hour.

'It's like a piece of art'

Though the Great Red Spot is the oldest storm in the solar system, it's also shrouded inmystery. It's been around for hundreds of years, but it could have existed many years before humansturned a telescopeto the heavens.

When you get really close, it's really amazing. It's like a piece of art.- Scott Bolton, principalinvestigator, Southwest Research Institute

The mechanism of the storm what feeds it and has allowed it to exist for many generations is unknown. And over the years, the storm hasn't been stable: some years it brightenedor shrank, only to begin growing again. Now, recent data suggest that the storm is again shrinking and getting paler.

"We don't know what we'll see. Of course, we've never seen it this close before When you get really close, it's really amazing," Bolton said."It's like a piece of art. We will see things that we've never seen before."

This photograph of Jupiter's cloud tops was imaged by Juno and processed by a citizen scientist. (NASA/JPL-Caltech/SwRI/MSSS/Bjrn Jnsson)

Instruments onthe spacecraft will collect data on the storm's structure, cloud tops, temperature, colours and more. Theywill even look for lightning.

But engineers are likely to be holding their breath. Each orbit takes Juno on a different path, and each time it gets more dangerous as it passes through the planet's incredible radiation, which could damage the orbiter. That concerns Bolton, who says, "I'm always at the edge of my seat."

But it's worth it.

He's not only excited about the visual treat that awaits us all, but he's also anticipating discoveries that will keep scientists on Earth busy for years.

"We don't know what the Great Red Spot really looks like or even how it works,"Boltonsaid. "This is the largest storm in the solar system. This is it. This is the king. The king planet and the king storm."

Juno was set to be closest to the planetat 9:55 p.m. ET July 10, a mere 3,500 kilometres above the cloud tops. Then, just more than 11 minutes later, it was expected tobe 9,000 kilometres above the raging storm, every instrument pointing towards it.

Citizens could beat scientists

Something that's unique to this planetary mission is that the raw images captured by JunoCamaboard the spacecraft are put onlinewhen they are downloaded. Here, ordinary citizens are able to take the data which doesn't give a complete, pretty picture like you may imagine put it together and createfull-colour photographs.

Some attempt to make it as realistic as possible, but some creative licence is also allowed. Most often you can find photos enhancing some colour or features on the planet.

This image was also processed by a citizen. (NASA/SwRI/MSSS/Gerald Eichstdt/Sen Doran)

But Boltonsaid that's part of the excitement of this next flyby. As soon as his group gets that data, they plan to put it on the site where anyone can process the image. Of course, his team will also be working on it.

Still, there's a possibility that someone from the public will beat them to it. Bolton will ensure that the image is scientifically accurate and,if it is, will release it to the public, likely by the following weekend.

"Somebody next week is going to be sitting at a computer, and they're going to be the very first human in all of history to see what theGreat Red Spot looks like really close-up," Bolton said.

Bolton is anticipating the images becauseother regions of the planet have proved to be beautiful and unique.

"In my wildest dreams, Iwouldn't have guessed how stunning the images that we've already returned from other parts of Jupiter. A lot of them are breathtaking, and you realize wow, this thing really is a beautiful planet."