Jupiter: Weather and Moons
The revamped team look at Jupiter's coloured bands and iconic 'eye', visible manifestations of a violent atmosphere that causes extraordinary weather.
New presenter Dr Maggie Aderin-Pocock joins Dr Chris Lintott in a revamped line-up that launches the show in its new home on 麻豆官网首页入口 Four.
The main subject is Jupiter, the largest planet in our solar system and particularly bright in the night sky during the British winter. What makes Jupiter's extraordinary weather? Its coloured bands and iconic 'eye' are visible manifestations of an extremely violent atmosphere. Chris and Maggie are joined by guest reporter, physicist Dr Helen Czerski, to explain why Jupiter looks so extraordinary.
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Clips
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Jupiter's weather
Duration: 06:08
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Starguide: February 2014
Duration: 01:32
Music Played
Timings (where shown) are from the start of the programme in hours and minutes
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00:00
Jean Sibelius
Pell茅as et M茅lisande (At the Castle Gate)
Orchestra: Royal Philharmonic Orchestra. Conductor: Thomas Beecham.- Sibelius Symphony No. 7.
Share your Jupiter images
We'd like to see your best snaps of Jupiter, especially if you manage to capture a full rotation. Our favourites will be featured on this website.
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Calling all citizen scientists: Dr Chris Lintott challenges you to find distant galaxies that have had their light bent by a gravitational lens.
- 听
Find the M82 supernova
Grab your binoculars and use Pete Lawrence's chart to spot the supernova that recently exploded in the Messier 82 cigar-shaped galaxy.
Credits
Role | Contributor |
---|---|
Presenter | Chris Lintott |
Presenter | Maggie Aderin-Pocock |
Series Producer | Rob Liddell |
Executive Producer | Jonathan Renouf |
Reporter | Helen Czerski |
Broadcasts
- Sun 9 Feb 2014 22:00
- Thu 13 Feb 2014 19:30
- Fri 14 Feb 2014 00:30
- Sun 16 Feb 2014 01:10
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