The New Horizons Long Range Reconnaissance Imager (LORRI) took this
2-millisecond exposure of Jupiter at 04:41:04 UTC on January 24, 2007. The
spacecraft was 57 million kilometers (35.3 million miles) from Jupiter,
closing in on the giant planet at 41,500 miles (66,790 kilometers) per
hour. At right are the moons Io (bottom) and Ganymede; Ganymede's shadow
creeps toward the top of Jupiter's northern hemisphere.
Two of Jupiter's largest storms are visible; the Great Red Spot on the
western (left) limb of the planet, trailing the Little Red Spot on the
eastern limb, at slightly lower latitude. The Great Red Spot is a 300-year
old storm more than twice the size of Earth. The Little Red Spot, which
formed over the past decade from the merging of three smaller storms, is
about half the size of its older and "greater" counterpart.