New Images of Jupiter From Cassini
Mike Parsons writes "BBC News is showing some new images of Jupiter recorded by the cameras from the Cassini spacecraft. Here is a quote: Cloudy belts and zones dominate Jupiter's appearance - the darker belts alternating with lighter zones. Scientists think the pale zones are areas of rising atmosphere, partly because many clouds on Earth form where atmosphere rises. Conversely, the dark belts have been viewed as areas where the atmosphere descends. However, pictures from the Cassini spacecraft tell a different story."
The article says December 2000, taking pictures for 6 months.
But if you haven't seen the pictures before, they're new to you...
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In as much as Cassini never got all that terribly close to Jupiter (it just barely slipped inside the magnetosphere, which is huge), I don't think you're seeing Cassini's best work. At Saturn, it will be in orbit, which means it will get a lot closer to the planet.
Even if its instruments were only of Voyager quality (and they aren't, they're better), it would still be a very useful mission simply because it will be able to take a lot more data over it's lifetime.