A series of wonderful images of Jupiter are sent from the Juno-NASA ship

The incredible images of Jupiter are still relentlessly sent back from NASA's Juno billion-dollar spacecraft. Currently the ship is spinning around Jupiter and 715,000,000km from Earth.

Scientists have used photographic equipment on Juno to record the first images of ammonia rivers, a 1,400km wide tornado that travels through the atmosphere, mysterious aurora bands and deeper insight. into the cloud layers of Jupiter to find evidence of a solid core inside the planet.

The Juno completed a roundabout around Jupiter every 53.5 days, moving at nearly 210,000 km / h. In fact, NASA wants to shorten this amount of time, meaning that the speed of travel will increase, but so some engines will behave abnormally.

Juno completed the sixth round around Jupiter on May 19 and captured the Earth's citizens with a series of new images of the planet. NASA quickly received raw data and revised it to make it available to the public, there are still many images and NASA technicians are still working on it.

Picture 1 of A series of wonderful images of Jupiter are sent from the Juno-NASA ship
The southern tip of Jupiter was captured by the Juno ship on May 19, the image being colored by two amateur scientists, showing the color contrast of atmospheric components.(Photo: NASA / JPL / MSSS / Gerald Eichstädt / Justin Cowart).

Picture 2 of A series of wonderful images of Jupiter are sent from the Juno-NASA ship
Another view of the southernmost of Jupiter shows that this planet is truly a giant in the Solar System.(Photo: NASA / JPL-Caltech / SwRI / MSSS / Kevin M. Gill).

Picture 3 of A series of wonderful images of Jupiter are sent from the Juno-NASA ship
Close-up of gas bands twisting in the atmosphere of Jupiter.(Photo: NASA / JPL-Caltech / SwRI / MSSS / Björn Jónsson).

Picture 4 of A series of wonderful images of Jupiter are sent from the Juno-NASA ship
Another close-up image was taken by Juno on May 19, showing a twisted storm with the opposite direction from the other storms around at the northern end of Jupiter.(Photo: NASA / JPL / MSSS / Gerald Eichstädt / Justin Cowart).

Picture 5 of A series of wonderful images of Jupiter are sent from the Juno-NASA ship
The area in the image is called "STB Specter" - NASA at first did not intend to take it in this sixth round, but a public vote made them change their mind and let Juno drop by to take a shot Close-up image of it.(Photo: NASA / JPL-Caltech / SwRI / MSSS / Roman Tkachenko).

Picture 6 of A series of wonderful images of Jupiter are sent from the Juno-NASA ship
A recent study published that scientists discovered ammonia rivers on Jupiter.And those rivers are clearly seen in this infrared light image.(Photo: NASA).

Picture 7 of A series of wonderful images of Jupiter are sent from the Juno-NASA ship
Dense clouds in Jupiter's atmosphere look directly from above by the Juno ship at a distance of about 12,500km.(NASA / JPL-Caltech / SwRI / MSSS / Gerald Eichstädt / Seán Doran).

Picture 8 of A series of wonderful images of Jupiter are sent from the Juno-NASA ship
A mysterious light-colored storm is appearing in the southernmost region of Jupiter in the image captured by the Juno ship on December 11, 2016.(Photo: NASA / JPL-Caltech / SwRI / MSSS / Gabriel Fiset).

Picture 9 of A series of wonderful images of Jupiter are sent from the Juno-NASA ship
In the picture is one of Jupiter's most prominent storms, known by NASA scientists as Little Red Spot , but it's actually about the same size as the Earth.The image was taken on February 2 last.(Photo: NASA / JPL-Caltech / SwRI / MSSS / Björn Jónsson).

Picture 10 of A series of wonderful images of Jupiter are sent from the Juno-NASA ship
A close-up of part of the area called "Jupiter's Jewel Chain" , are entangled storm clouds.The image was taken on Juno's fifth round of filming from March 27, but it was only handled by NASA technicians today.(Photo: NASA / JPL-Caltech / SwRI / MSSS / Kevin M. Gill).

Picture 11 of A series of wonderful images of Jupiter are sent from the Juno-NASA ship
NASA calls this "Edge of Jupiter".The right part of Jupiter in this image has been cut in one piece, if not cut off, you will see the robot arm of the Juno ship.In this view, you will see a lot of violent storms that stir up the atmosphere of Jupiter.(Photo: NASA / JPL-Caltech / SwRI / MSSS).

Picture 12 of A series of wonderful images of Jupiter are sent from the Juno-NASA ship
An untreated image, a raw image taken and sent directly to the Earth from the Juno ship, shows blurred lines as Jupiter's icy and dirt belt.Stars as background are the stars of the Orion constellation.(Photo: NASA / JPL-Caltech / SwRI / MSSS).