00:00 You've probably heard of the man on the moon, but you've likely never seen the creepy face
00:07 that NASA's Juno probe just discovered on Jupiter.
00:11 The spacecraft recently made its 54th flyby of our solar system's largest planet, snapping
00:16 this photo as it passed.
00:17 Jupiter is covered in wild storms, the likes of which we can't even imagine on Earth, and
00:21 several of those spinning, Earth-sized tempests recently converged to produce what looks like
00:26 a scary face.
00:27 The photo was captured on September 7th as Juno came within 4,800 miles of Jupiter.
00:32 It also captured the line of nightfall on the planet.
00:35 A particularly interesting moment to scientists as the lengthening shadows paint a more intricate,
00:40 sort of 3D picture for researchers.
00:42 Juno has been circling Jupiter since 2016, but we're only just beginning to scratch the
00:46 surface with regards to understanding the planet.
00:49 Recent observations, for instance, have revealed a change in Jupiter's iconic red spot.
00:53 It's now around 10,159 miles wide, or more than 2,000 miles bigger than Earth.
00:59 However, that storm, which was first observed by astronomers in 1831, is also shrinking
01:04 at an accelerating rate.
01:06 [music]
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