10 years after NASA launched its Juno mission to Jupiter, these are its most stunning images of the gas giant

juno mission spacecraft probe flying over jupiter clouds storms perijove 7 nasa jpl msss swri kevin m gill 39151111202_e315b52f52_o
An illustration of NASA's Juno spacecraft flying above the clouds of Jupiter.
  • NASA's Juno spacecraft has been orbiting Jupiter and taking jaw-dropping photos of the gas giant since 2016.
  • Juno has flown past Jupiter's polar cyclones, anticyclones, auroras, the Great Red Spot, and enormous moons.
  • Citizen scientists touch up Juno's raw images to highlight storms and clouds in stunning color. These pictures reveal the tumultuous bands of the planet's atmosphere, from its equator to each pole.
  • The mission has also collected data that's revealing how Jupiter has evolved over time. That history is critical to understanding the gas giants that orbit other stars.
  • Juno's data has revealed the workings of Jupiter's X-ray auroras, the depth of its Great Red Spot, and the immense power of its magnetic field.
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NASA's Juno mission has been orbiting Jupiter and snapping stunning photos for more than five years.
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Jupiter, as photographed by the Juno spacecraft, in September 2017.
The spacecraft launched more than 10 years ago, on August 5, 2011. As it sped towards Jupiter, it snapped a goodbye photo of Earth, proving that its cameras were ready for space.
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The Juno spacecraft's JunoCam caught this image of Earth as it sped past on October 9, 2011, to get a gravitational boost towards Jupiter.
Juno finally reached the giant, gaseous planet in 2016. It fell into Jupiter's orbit that July.
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Juno snapped this photo of a "Jupiterrise" on one of its first flybys in 2016.
Since launch, the probe has traveled more than 1 billion miles, and its JunoCam instrument has taken more than 19,800 photos.
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Clouds swirl around each other on Jupiter.
Juno beams the raw data to Earth as black-and-white photo layers that represent red, blue, and green.
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A raw image of Jupiter in blue, green, and red, captured August 6, 2021.
Then citizen scientists merge the layers and process them to make colorful portraits. They enhance the colors to highlight different bands of Jupiter's atmosphere, storms, and clouds.
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Jupiter's reddish-orange North North Temperate Belt, with two gray-colored anticyclones, May 23, 2018.
Juno's orbit takes it far from Jupiter, then swings it back towards the planet for close flybys. In those flybys, the probe has flown by Jupiter's north pole, where eight storms rage around a giant, Earth-sized cyclone at the center.
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A composite infrared image from the Juno spacecraft shows cyclones at Jupiter's north pole, February 2, 2017.
The planet's south pole is no less stunning. Juno gave us the first close-up pictures ever taken of Jupiter's poles.
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A photo of Jupiter's south pole, as seen by NASA's Juno spacecraft.
Seen together, the series of photos that Juno snaps during each flyby enables image processors - like Seán Doran, who created this composite - to show the spacecraft's journey.
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Images from Juno's April 2018 flyby, approaching Jupiter.
The successive images show Juno zipping from one pole to the other in just a few hours, approaching Jupiter and then flying away.
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Images from Juno's April 2018 flyby, leaving Jupiter.
But Juno's mission isn't about pretty pictures. It's looking for clues about how Jupiter formed and how it evolved over time.
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That history can help scientists learn about the beginnings of our solar system and give clues about Jupiter-like gas giants orbiting other stars.
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Jupiter's swirling clouds.
Juno measured Jupiter's magnetic field for the first time, finding it far more powerful than scientists expected. Jupiter's magnetic field is 10 times more powerful than the strongest field on Earth.
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A mass of swirling clouds on Jupiter.
A year after its arrival, Juno zipped past Jupiter's Great Red Spot, a raging storm near the planet's equator. It discovered that this cyclone goes 200 miles deep - that's 50 to 100 times as deep as Earth's oceans.
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Scientists animated this 2017 Juno image of the Great Red Spot based on velocity data from the spacecraft and models of the storm's winds.
Cyclones spin in the same direction as the planet, but anticyclones spin in the opposite direction. Both are found all over Jupiter, in varying sizes.
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A white anticyclone swirls on Jupiter's surface on April 1, 2018.
Juno has also spotted the aurora ribboning across Jupiter's south pole - like auroras on Earth, but hundreds of times more powerful. Unlike other planets' auroras, Jupiter's emit powerful X-rays.
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Jupiter's southern aurora in infrared, August 27, 2016.
In June, the spacecraft flew past Jupiter's icy satellite Ganymede, the largest moon in the solar system. Scientists think that Ganymede harbors an ocean beneath its surface, which means it could harbor life.
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This image of Ganymede was obtained by the JunoCam imager during Juno’s June 7, 2021, flyby of the icy moon.
Citizen scientist Gerald Eichstädt compiled Juno's imagery into a time-lapse video of its June flyby, which took the spacecraft past Jupiter and Ganymede.

The video lasts three minutes and 30 seconds, but in reality, it took Juno nearly 15 hours to travel the 735,000 miles between Ganymede and Jupiter, then about three additional hours to travel between Jupiter's poles.

Juno has also captured the shadow of Jupiter's volcanically active moon, Io, passing between the planet and the sun. Altogether, Jupiter has 79 moons.
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Jupiter's volcanically active moon Io casts its shadow on the planet, September 11, 2019.
Juno was originally set to push itself to a fiery death in Jupiter's atmosphere this July, but NASA extended its mission through September 2025. It now plans to zip past the moons Ganymede, Io, and Europa.
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A cyclonic storm captured during Juno's 23rd flyby of Jupiter, November 3, 2019.
In the process, Juno is sure to beam back more photos of the largest planet in our solar system.
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Colorful swirling cloud belts in Jupiter's southern hemisphere, December 16, 2017.
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