NOW JUPITER HAS CHANGED ! TAKE A CLEAR LOOK AT ITS CHANGING POSITION !!!
Jupiter, as seen on May 9, 2010 by amateur astronomer Anthony Wesley from Australia.
Jupiter's appearance has changed dramatically since the end of 2009, when it moved too close to the Sun from our vantage point on Earth to be observed. New looks at the
planet after it emerged from the Sun's glare reveals that one of the bands of clouds, the South Equatorial Belt, has gone missing. This image from amateur astronomer Anthony Wesley (the same astronomer who captured an impact spot on Jupiter last year) taken on May 9, 2010, shows a rather undressed Jupiter without its usually prominent southern band. See a comparison of earlier images below.Emily at the Planetary Society has written about this, and so has amateur astronomer Bob King, a.k.a "Astro Bob," who explains:
Every 3-15 years, the belt, which is normally dark reddish-brown in color and typically divided in two by the south equatorial belt zone, fades from view. After some weeks or months a brilliant white spot forms within that zone and begins spouting dark blobs of material which get stretched into filaments and ovals by Jupiter's fierce winds into a new SEB. Within a few weeks (or longer) the belt is back and Jupiter presents its familiar dual "tire track" appearance through a telescope.
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