The storm on the planet is so big that if Earth were dropped into it, it would be swallowed from the orbit of the International Space Space down to sea level.
's Juno spacecraft have led to the discovery that Jupiter's Great Red Spot is deeper than previously believed. The findings reveal that the storm extends as far as 300 miles down into the atmosphere of the giant planet.
Yet, because of its tremendous width of over 10,000 miles, and the fact that the gas giant's atmosphere reaches its center, the team behind the findings still describes the storm as flat like a pancake. Parisi, who was part of a Juno mission that used gravity measurements to investigate this and some of Jupiter's other storms, explains that the question of the spot's depth has puzzled scientists for decades with many believing the storm is only"skin deep" at the surface of Jupiter.
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