NASA's Juno spacecraft camera RAW images processing
Io (Jupiter I) is the innermost and second-smallest of the four Galilean moons of the planet Jupiter.
"New NASA photos offer a close look at Jupiter's fiery moon with erupting volcanos that dwarf anything on Earth",
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"Taken by NASA's Juno spacecraft, this black-and-white photo of the surface of Jupiter's icy moon Europa reveals a curious feature – shaped somewhat like the musical symbol for a quarter note – surrounded by a vast network of linear ridges and dark blotches. It was obtained by Juno's Stellar Reference Unit (SRU) during the spacecraft's Sept. 29, 2022, flyby of Europa."
Trusting my stargazing app, this bright light in the night sky seems to be Jupiter 👀
I wouldn't venture into affirming the tiny little spots of light around the planet are its moons, clearly they are very far away and I'm not sure my camera would capture them... but if they are its moons, then that's a very cool stargazing moment ^^
Jupiter has auroras - what we call the northern or southern lights - in its upper atmosphere. And we've seen auroras on all 4 of Jupiter's large Galilean moons, too. Previously, scientists had observed auroras on Jupiter's moons primarily at ultraviolet wavelengths. But now astronomers have made visible light observations of new auroras on Io, Europa, Ganymede and Callisto.