This is how you would see the Great Red Spot if you could fly over it.

If you are interested in astronomy, then you know what the Great Red Spot is, right? It is nothing more than one of Jupiter's most striking features - and is the largest storm in the Solar System, with 16, 000 kilometers in diameter and winds exceeding 600 km / h and reaching temperatures that can exceed 1, 300 degrees Celsius. .

Well, NASA's Juno spacecraft - which has been around the gas giant since last year - made a historic approach to the storm in July (you can check out more on this link) and, in addition to collecting data, took the opportunity to capture a series of unpublished images of the immense stain.

Now, according to Mike Wall of Space.com, NASA has released an edited version that shows how human eyes would see the Great Red Spot - if one of us had the opportunity to fly over this incredible storm. See the result in more detail below:

(NASA / JPL-Caltech / SwRI / MSSS / Björn Jónsson)

Less dramatic than some images of the Great Red Spot that were previously released (check out the gallery below), but no less impressive, don't you think? After all, don't forget that our planet would fit easily into the storm!

(NASA / JPL-Caltech / SwRI / MSSS / Roman Tkachenko)

(Daily Express)

(PBS / Carlos Galeano -Cosmonautika)

(Wikimedia Commons / NASA / Caltech / JPL)

(The Daily Galaxy / nssdc / gsfc / nasa / gov)

But getting back to the image now released - in the colors our eyes would see - it was captured during that historic overfly Juno made in July (the 10th) and processed by a guy named Björn Jónsson based on data collected by Unmanned ship.