These photos of Jupiter look 'like nothing we have seen or imagined before'

New Horizons took this image of the icy moon Europa rising above Jupiter's cloud tops after the spacecraft's closest approach to Jupiter.

"It looks like nothing we have seen or imagined before" Image: REUTERS/Ho New

Dave Mosher
Science and Technology Correspondent, Business Insider
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When NASA's Juno spacecraft first flew by Jupiter on August 27, all we got was a fuzzy image of the gas giant from a glancing angle. But now scientists behind the mission are starting to trickle out high-resolution photos and videos taken during the 130,000-mph maneuver, briefly making Juno the fastest human-made object ever launched.

Gaze in awe at this moody, first image of Jupiter's swirling north pole:

 Jupiter's North Pole
Image: NASA JPL-Caltech SwRI MSSS

"[I]t looks like nothing we have seen or imagined before," Scott Bolton, a planetary scientist at the Southwest Research Institute in San Antonio and the Juno mission's leader, said in a NASA statement released on September 2.

"It's bluer in color up there than other parts of the planet, and there are a lot of storms. There is no sign of the latitudinal bands or zone and belts that we are used to — this image is hardly recognizable as Jupiter," Bolton said.

But the pinwheel-shaped spacecraft also swung by the south pole of the largest planet in the solar system. NASA also released an eerie infrared image of a southern Jovian aurora:

Image: NASA

The images come from just the first of 36 flybys that NASA has planned for Juno. These are the closest views of the so-called king of the solar system that we've seen since 2007. That's when NASA's New Horizons probe paid a visit while stealing some gravitational energy to make it to Pluto.

"We are in an orbit nobody has ever been in before, and these images give us a whole new perspective on this gas-giant world," Bolton said in a previous NASA statement.

Before New Horizons, the Cassini mission took some gorgeous photos of the 89,000-mile-wide planet before continuing on to Saturn. Here's one of the most impressive Cassini images of Jupiter that we've seen, taken in 2001:

Image: NASA

Sometime before the end of 2016, NASA will tighten Juno's orbits around Jupiter, causing it to swing around the planet once every 14 days for the next 16 months:

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Once the mission ends, however, Juno won't live on as a relic of humanity's exploration. To protect any aliens that might be living on icy moons such as Europa and Ganymede, NASA intends to fly the $1 billion probe to its doom — right into the seemingly bottomless, noxious clouds of Jupiter.

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