Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Jupiter is a gaseous planet with varying latitudes and directions of its surface. (Click here for film loop)


The Southern Pole of the planet has been noted to have a significant change in its surface, believed to be caused from the crash of a comet. It appears as though the planet literally swallowed the comet in its entirety without much trace except for the bright spot, probably the only traces of an explosion with the intense gas layer.

New NASA Images Indicate Object Hits Jupiter (click here)
July 20, 2009
Scientists have found evidence that another object has bombarded Jupiter, exactly 15 years after the first impacts by the comet Shoemaker-Levy 9.

Following up on a tip by an amateur astronomer, Anthony Wesley of Australia, that a new dark "scar" had suddenly appeared on Jupiter, this morning between 3 and 9 a.m. PDT (6 a.m. and noon EDT) scientists at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., using NASA's Infrared Telescope Facility at the summit of Mauna Kea, Hawaii, gathered evidence indicating an impact.
New infrared images show the likely impact point was near the south polar region, with a visibly dark "scar" and bright upwelling particles in the upper atmosphere detected in near-infrared wavelengths, and a warming of the upper troposphere with possible extra emission from ammonia gas detected at mid-infrared wavelengths.
"We were extremely lucky to be seeing Jupiter at exactly the right time, the right hour, the right side of Jupiter to witness the event. We couldn't have planned it better," said Glenn Orton, a scientist at JPL....


Size comparison of Earth to Jupiter. The comet impact is a fairly significant size.