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Archives

Fig2b_Map_PJ6-footprints

Juno at Perijove-6: Polar and high temperate regions

When Juno flew low over Jupiter’s clouds on its sixth orbit on 2017 May 19 (Perijove-6), its camera JunoCam took

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First scientific results from Juno

The first batch of scientific papers from Juno is being released on-line, and the main results were summarised in a

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2016-17, Report no.10

Jupiter in 2016/17, Report no.10:  Interim report (2017 May) John Rogers (British Astronomical Association), using data from the JUPOS team:

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2016-17, Report no.9: Interactions of ovals in high northern latitudes, 2017 March-April

There is currently much interest in the behaviour of features in the high northern latitudes, as these are shown in

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Juno’s closest fly-over at perijove-5

Juno had another successful pass over Jupiter at its fifth perijove on 2017 March 27, coming closer than ever before; the

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Juno at Perijove-5

Juno had another successful pass over Jupiter at its fifth perijove on 2017 March 27. JunoCam took another fine set

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Fig1_SS-AWOs-minimerger_2017mar_v2

2016-17, Report no.8: Mergers of small ovals in the S2 domain

On March 5, Damian Peach noticed that a pair of very small anticyclonic white ovals (AWOs) in the S.S. Temperate

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2016-17, Report no.7: Preview of Juno’s perijove-5

Juno’s perijove-5 will be on 2017 March 27.  Attached is a predictive map, showing how I expect the planet to

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2016-17, Report no.6

This is a summary of the main phenomena observed so far this year, up to Feb.25, with an annotated map

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JunoCam at perijove-1 (PDF version)

All our previous reports on the perijove-1 images are combined in this PDF: JupLet 2016e_PJ1_JHR-report.pdf For the full-size figures, please

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