Abstract brush strokes? Not! These pink shapes are Jupterian storms.

There are so many beautiful images of Jupiter that NASA shares that we here at Mega are even considering the idea of ​​creating a weekly session to share with our readers the most spectacular records of the gas giant. The last one is the one you can see next - which looks more like an abstract painting created by some talented artist. Check out:

A post shared by Mission Juno (@nasajuno) on Mar 15, 2018 at 1:55 PDT

However, instead of abstract brush strokes and pink shapes, the image above shows a portion of clouds that the Juno spacecraft recorded from the Jupterian atmosphere during its 11th flyover on the planet on February 7th. When it captured the scene, the device was at a distance of just under 12.2 thousand kilometers from the turbulent formations observed at 49.2 degrees in the north latitude of the planet.

Obviously, Jupiter has no clouds nor is it the scene of pink storms! The image NASA shared was first processed by a guy named Matt Brealey from data collected by the spacecraft, and then the colors were adjusted by another collaborator - identified by the space agency as Gustavo BC.

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