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... Voyager, Galileo, and Cassini space probes captured the best images we have of Jupiter. This dramatic view of Jupiter's Great Red Spot and its surroundings was obtained by Voyager 1 on February 25, 1979, when the spacecraft was5.7 million miles from Jupiter. Cloud details as small as 100 miles across can be seen here. The wavy cloud ... is a region of extraordinarily complex and variable wave motion. To give a sense of Jupiter's scale, the white oval storm directly below the Great Red Spot is approximately the ...
... include a color TV camera and the first to succeed in obtaining pictures since Venera 10. The lander touched down in March 1982. http://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/photo_gallery/photogallery ...
Most stars would look very similar to the Sun. The pointy shapes that we draw are not the way stars look up close. The spikes that appear in photographs of stars are artifacts caused ...
From close-up, you'd see a bright, blotchy planet with a fuzzy edge due to its thin, ... its big moon, Charon, orbiting nearby. But we don't know what other details you'd see, because we have no close-up pictures yet.
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Answer provided by Dr. John Spencer, Ph.D ...
Mercury looks like our Moon. Venus is always cloud-covered. Mars mostly looks like a red desert. Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune are giant gas planets. Pluto may be a large ball of ...
The astronauts who have been to the Moon say that up close it is a light gray, almost a cinder color. There are colored glasses on the ...
... bigger than Earth. The planet spins on its side like a wheel with its south pole always facing the Sun. It is unknown what, if anything, lies beneath the dense clouds that ...
Space itself is extremely black, but it presents a wonderful backdrop for the Earth with its rich blues, vivid greens and puffs of white.
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Answer provided by Dennis Tito
Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and Answer extracted from the book Kids to Space - by Lonnie Schorer
Image:9781894959421.jpg '''Buy This Book''' http://www.apogeebooks.com/Books/For% ...
When in space, we can witness a sunset and a sunrise every 45 minutes while we orbit the Earth. Astronauts who are performing spacewalks outside the Shuttle lower their gold protective visors to allow their eyes to be protected from the incredible increase in brightness once the Sun reappears from behind the Earth. We can also clearly see the delicate nature of the Earth set against the black ...
There is no dark side of the Moon. This is a term often used to refer to the far side of the Moon. The far side is always pointed away from the Earth because of the rotation period of the Moon matching that of Earth's. However it receives as much sunshine as the side of the Moon facing the Earth.
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Answer provided by Thomas Matula, Ph.D. & Kenneth J. Murphy
Image:K2S logosmall. ...
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