A pair of newly-published papers detailing insights gleaned from NASA's Juno probe include a breathtaking look at Jupiter's poles.
The incredibly colorful perspective of the planet shows massive whirling cyclones and 'anticyclonic' storms covering the top and bottom of Jupiter.
Juno principal investigator Scott Bolton noted that, "it almost looks like meteor craters, but, of course, it's all atmosphere. It's all gas."
The monstrous storms measure an astounding 870-miles wide at their largest and remain fairly mysterious to scientists.
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