A year or so ago, the lower reddish band that was visible even to amateur astronomers here on earth disappeared. I just read that it has begun a re-appearance. Evidently it was covered by an ammonia cloud this whole time. The outer surface of Jupiter is composed of various chemical storms that have winds that get up into the hundreds of miles an hour on a regular basis. No problem really, until the great red spot begins spewing forth thousands of monoliths... then we'd better be somewhere else.
All that you touch, and all that you see...
all that you taste, all you feel...
and all that you love, and all that you hate
all you distrust, all you save...
and all that you give, and all that you deal...
all that you buy, beg, borrow, or steal...
all you create, and all you destroy...
all that you do, and all that you say...
all that you eat, and everyone you meet...
all that you slight, and everyone you fight...
and all that is now, and all that is gone...
and all that's to come,
and everything under the sun is in tune...
but the sun is eclipsed by the moon...................
All these worlds are yours except Europa. Attempt no landings there. Use them together. Use them in peace. And if you can't, go fuck a duck.
Very well said bro! I did not know that about the bands. I will have to ask the stargazer I work with about that. He follows these things very closely. Last year he showed me a video of the meteor that crashed into Jupiter leaving a very visible streak and hole in the cloud formation. Everyone should have their own stargazer.
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