RE: Studying Jupiter's Atmosphere from Earth

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Studying Jupiter's Atmosphere from Earth

in steemstem •  6 years ago 

In all, the most famous one is the red spot. As you said it is shrinking, so is it possible that the cyclone will stop in future and the whole environment will become more suitable. Although I guess it will never be suitable for us untill we achieve more knowledge of technology.
Or may be we need some alien technology....😄

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More suitable, what for landing? There is a small problem of no solid ground, so you would need some type of airship and navigate it to avoid areas of high turbulence.

I don't know if only the red spot is the culprit for the weather :D
I would like to think that we could survive there, at least in a spacecraft..

The red spot is only part of the weather system. Regarding traveling there it would be pretty unpleasant for humans (as well as electrical equipment) as you need to shielding against Jupiter's intense radiation belts. On top of that if you were able to float around the cloud tops you would weight nearly 3 times as much!

I know, I saw a detailed info-graphic of the radiation belts there and on Saturn and how spacecraft avoid them when possible.

I seem to remember even some of the inner moons were deemed too dangerous to travel to. The magnetic field of Jupiter is many order's of magnitude stronger than earth's and there are a lot of high energy charged particles flying about. For this reason I think our first human trips would be to either Europa or Callisto.