00:00The gas giant Jupiter has shimmering auroras circling its poles,
00:05and new images from NASA's Juno mission are shining a light on these brilliant displays.
00:10In the auroras, a brief but intense period of brightening sometimes happens in the early morning.
00:16These are called dawn storms, and Juno's images offered a perspective of the storms that scientists had never seen before.
00:24Telescopes on Earth and the Hubble telescope in space previously spotted Jupiter's dawn storms, but they only captured partial views.
00:33Juno's ultraviolet spectrograph was the first imager to peer down at dawn storms from overhead for eight hours at a
00:39time
00:40so that scientists could watch the storms as they formed and grew.
00:44They found that the dawn storms were born in darkness, forming on the planet's nighttime side as isolated glowing spots
00:51in auroras.
00:52As Jupiter rotates, the storms travel to the daytime side and glow even brighter, spewing up to thousands of gigawatts
01:00of ultraviolet light into space.
01:02And at their brightest, dawn storms produce at least ten times more energy than Jupiter's typical auroras do.
01:11The moon storm Saginais and depth of their new ramifications
01:17The moon's as their star-spirit of lunar of the day share of the galaxy.
01:21This is a long-term, a year-lookingï¿½ï¿½ê³ é»ž, and the Pacific Ocean meets a time-planade and the other building
01:21on the earth.
01:21The sky is now the sky is now-spirmed.
01:21The sky is now being that the sky is the sky, the e-spirmed, the sky is the sky.
01:21The sky is now the sky is now bright, the sky is the sky, the sky is the sky.
01:30You
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