
Left: Étienne Léopold Crovevelot attracted Jupiter on 1 November 1880, recording five major dark spots in the planet’s answer temperate belt (NTB). In this reproduction, spots have been incorrectly increased. Credit: The Tovellut Astronomical Drawing Manual (1882) Wright: William F. The rendering of Dening’s November 29, 1880, Jupiter suggests how the “train” of small dark spots in NTB developed over time. Credit: The splendor of the sky, volume. 1 (1923)
Lucky is the word that I use for any telescope supervisors, who found one of the most amazing glasses in nature, when the Comat Shomekar-Levi9 impressed Jupiter in July 1994. The collision left stains made up for months in the atmosphere of the planet, which also appears with the largest velts with the largest veils.
At that time, it seemed like a lifetime phenomenon to see an effect on another world, amateur astronomers and space scientists continue to record others equally, although very small, has an impact on Jupiter. About a dozen such events are known to date; Undoubtedly this number will continue to increase.
One in 2018 Astronomy and Astronomy Physics The title “Small Effect on Vishal planet Jupiter”, Ricardo Huceau and colleagues estimated that about 16 to 65 feet (5 to 20 meters) or more smaller objects should affect Jupiter and be obsessed with Earth once every 0.4 to 2.6 years every 0.4 to 2.6 years. Most of these incidents have been captured as a bright scarring without any discretionary scarring – but there have been large events.
The most notable was on July 19, 2009, a dark impact scar discovered by Australian amateur astronomer Anthony Wesley. In images taken with its 14.5 inch reflectors, effects (about 650 to 1,600 ft) [200 to 490 m] In diameter) 5,000 miles long (8,000 km) deep mark in the southern hemisphere of Jupiter.
In April 2024, Pavel Drozedzal, a Ph.D. The student at the University of Adam Mikiviks in Poland warned me for a paper published on 1 February 1997 in the publications of Astronomical Society, Japan. In “the discovery of a potential impact location on Jupiter recorded in 1690”, prominent writer Ishi Tabe and colleagues reported a dark location prepared by Italian astronomer Giovanni Dominico Cassini in December 1690. He said that this place was similar to the influence of the Comet D/Shomekar-Levi9. Over a period of 18 days, Cassini observed and sketch the place as it was spread in a series of trails intelligent by Zupiter’s zonal winds. Taking this series of paintings as a circumstantial evidence – and using a simple simulation to confirm their doubts – the authors concluded that the place was “possibly manufactured by the effect of a single celestial object around 1690 December 5.”
Another eyebrow-razing Jupiter drawing was created on 1 November 1880 by the French astronomical artist étienne Léopold Truvevelot, recording five big black spots on the planet’s answer temperate belt (NTB). He described the scene in his 1882 book The Crowverwell Astronomical Drawing Manual, given that in October 1880, a relatively quiet four -year period ended on Jupiter, “when there was a lot of uproar on the Northern Hemisphere.” He also said that when the spots appeared for the first time, he had some similarity of sun-wash without a penmbra, with bright marks around him, resembling Fesula. These round spots later increased significantly, until they unite with the entire line, surround the planet, and finally make a narrow pink belt … “
In your classic 1958 work Planet JupiterBritish astronomer Bertrandrand Peak wrote that the incident was first in the history recorded that the outbreak of dark spots was seen on the south shore of NTB. The spot also displayed the smallest rotation period which was once seen on Jupiter. Planetary scientists now know that Jupiter is the fastest zonal jet in this region.
Famous British supervisor William F. Denning also visited the NTB dark spot, first recorded him on 23 October 1880. By the end of October and early November, he tried to identify him on the successful transit of the planet’s central meridian, but “there were a lot of such changes in their appearance and distribution, only two principals could have been spotted,” he reported. Indeed, compared to the five much larger spots, which are disturbed Drew, later on November 29, 1880, draws from how the spots evolved into a long train of short spots.
Although these statements significantly remind SL-9 impact scars, a smokey turns into a red band because they were scattered, scientists have no direct proof of an effective. One may speculate that the affected items may have triggered the construction of this disturbance, as the observers had never seen dark spots at that place on the planet before, but there is no evidence.
I hope you will continue to inspect Jupiter, because no one ever knows when a comet or asteroid will strike. As usual, send considering sjomeara31@gmail.com