Itβs always so funny to me that the amount of saturation in these images is directly proportional to how long theyβve been doing the rounds on social media.
pics
Rules:
1.. Please mark original photos with [OC] in the title if you're the photographer
2..Pictures containing a politician from any country or planet are prohibited, this is a community voted on rule.
3.. Image must be a photograph, no AI or digital art.
4.. No NSFW/Cosplay/Spam/Trolling images.
5.. Be civil. No racism or bigotry.
Photo of the Week Rule(s):
1.. On Fridays, the most upvoted original, marked [OC], photo posted between Friday and Thursday will be the next week's banner and featured photo.
2.. The weekly photos will be saved for an end of the year run off.
Instance-wide rules always apply. https://mastodon.world/about
Directly downloaded from Official Website: https://www.missionjuno.swri.edu/Vault/VaultOutput?VaultID=53592&ts=1723603688
It's on the "official website" but it's a "user processed image". Looks like it was a color enhanced version of this original: https://www.missionjuno.swri.edu/Vault/VaultOutput?VaultID=53518&ts=1723603688
Oh didn't know that Thanks.
Which is dumb because the original is already super cool.
Hate to break it to you but from what I can tell this was captured with JunoCam, a visible-light camera. So an "unaltered" version would have familiar colors, and this is already edited.
I mean, aren't most images from orbiters and space telescopes heavily processed before the public ever sees them?
Of course, what they call "camera" might be a high-res spectrometer, plus there may be stacking, tiling, digital optics correction etc. However, the camera did capture a visible-light picture so it has a "natural" interpretation (you can convert it into a "human POV") and this is not that. It probably does not even convey extra information (such as exact wavelengths our cones cannot distinguish) so it's akin to just using a solarization filter on a normal color CMOS camera photo.
Looks like a gemstone I'd try to eat.
You know what rocks are delicious? Silica gel.
Oh wow I didnβt realize Jupiter is actually pretty and not just a tan streaky ball
Jupiter definitely had a post-high school glow up.
Wow. That's gorgeous.
WHAOUDUDE!
That's amazing
Normal View:
Color-Enhanced:
Got a link for hi rez first imagine, make for an awesome monitor background.
Both come from The Very Pulse of the Machine, a beautiful episode of Netflix's Love, Death and Robots. All episodes are effectively unrelated so you can watch in any order. The upper one is from the first minute. Nobody seems to have uploaded it above FullHD but you can just pirate the episode in 4K and snapshot any frame you want.
Van Gogh would be proud
came to lemmy to escape the far reaching claws of Big Art but here we are ;;
Are all those circular spots essentially Jupiter hurricanes?
This is so gorgeous!
Ignite it.
Probably it could ignite by itself if that was needed for it.