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Object Slams Into Jupiter (not a joke)

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bobheck

Disco still sucks.
New NASA Images Indicate Object Hits Jupiter - NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory

Edit: Server may be busy, this is on Drudge right now so it is probably getting hit pretty hard. But keep trying, you will get in. If I get in again I will post text here.

Edit: Here is the text of the article

New NASA Images Indicate Object Hits Jupiter

jup-20090720-browse.jpg
This image shows a large impact on Jupiter's south polar region captured on July 20, 2009, by NASA's Infrared Telescope Facility in Mauna Kea, Hawaii. Image credit: NASA/JPL/Infrared Telescope Facility

July 20, 2009
<!--JPLIMAGEMARKER __JPL_CAPTION_1
&rsaquo; Browse version of image
--> Scientists have found evidence that another object has bombarded Jupiter, exactly 15 years after the first impacts by the comet Shoemaker-Levy 9.

Following up on a tip by an amateur astronomer, Anthony Wesley of Australia, that a new dark "scar" had suddenly appeared on Jupiter, this morning between 3 and 9 a.m. PDT (6 a.m. and noon EDT) scientists at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., using NASA's Infrared Telescope Facility at the summit of Mauna Kea, Hawaii, gathered evidence indicating an impact.

New infrared images show the likely impact point was near the south polar region, with a visibly dark "scar" and bright upwelling particles in the upper atmosphere detected in near-infrared wavelengths, and a warming of the upper troposphere with possible extra emission from ammonia gas detected at mid-infrared wavelengths.

"We were extremely lucky to be seeing Jupiter at exactly the right time, the right hour, the right side of Jupiter to witness the event. We couldn't have planned it better," said Glenn Orton, a scientist at JPL.

Orton and his team of astronomers kicked into gear early in the morning and haven't stopped tracking the planet. They are downloading data now and are working to get additional observing time on this and other telescopes.

This image was taken at 1.65 microns, a wavelength sensitive to sunlight reflected from high in Jupiter's atmosphere, and it shows both the bright center of the scar (bottom left) and the debris to its northwest (upper left).

"It could be the impact of a comet, but we don't know for sure yet," said Orton. "It's been a whirlwind of a day, and this on the anniversary of the Shoemaker-Levy 9 and Apollo anniversaries is amazing."

Shoemaker-Levy 9 was a comet that had been seen to break into many pieces before the pieces hit Jupiter in 1994.

Leigh Fletcher, a NASA postdoctoral fellow at JPL who worked with Orton during these latest observations said, "Given the rarity of these events, it's extremely exciting to be involved in these observations. These are the most exciting observations I've seen in my five years of observing the outer planets!"

The observations were made possible in large measure by the extraordinary efforts of the Infrared Telescope Facility staff, including telescope operator William Golisch, who adroitly moved three instruments in and out of the field during the short time the scar was visible on the planet, providing the wide wavelength coverage.

JPL is managed for NASA by the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena.



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Carolina Martinez 818-354-9382
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.
carolina.martinez@jpl.nasa.gov
 
Thanks Bob, aint it good to know we have our very own hoover, (or is it dyson now)
in our solar system.

HOORAH for gravitational attraction,

Mark
 
Thanks for the post. I was able to view the impact sites from Shoemaker-Levy 9 through my telescope for days after it occurred. A truly awesome sight. Just a reminder of our own vulnerability to impacts. A while back I caught a PBS nova about a possible impact around 13,000 years ago that may have caused the extinction of some large mammals and the Clovis culture. Here is a link.

NOVA | Last Extinction | Watch the Program | PBS
 
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