Band Transition [ID: 171]
Not Currently Tracking
Submitted by : Berkeley-84 on 2016-06-18 22:21 UT
See the difference in the bands
map : 2016-06-16 UT
map : 2016-07-01 UT
map : 2016-07-21 UT
map : 2016-11-08 UT
map : 2016-12-11 UT
map : 2017-01-04 UT
map : 2017-01-18 UT
map : 2017-02-09 UT
map : 2017-02-28 UT
map : 2017-03-08 UT
map : 2017-04-03 UT
map : 2017-04-26 UT
map : 2017-06-08 UT
map : 2017-06-20 UT
map : 2017-08-11 UT
map : 2018-01-31 UT
map : 2018-02-26 UT
map : 2018-03-15 UT
map : 2018-03-28 UT
map : 2018-04-11 UT
map : 2018-05-04 UT
map : 2018-05-24 UT
map : 2018-06-13 UT
map : 2018-07-01 UT
map : 2018-07-25 UT
map : 2018-08-28 UT
map : 2019-02-11 UT
map : 2019-03-13 UT
map : 2019-04-04 UT
map : 2019-05-20 UT
map : 2019-06-12 UT
map : 2019-06-27 UT
map : 2019-07-16 UT
map : 2019-09-09 UT
map : 2019-09-23 UT
map : 2019-10-21 UT
map : 2019-11-14 UT
map : 2020-03-09 UT
map : 2020-03-30 UT
map : 2020-04-06 UT
map : 2020-04-27 UT
map : 2020-05-15 UT
map : 2020-05-28 UT
map : 2020-06-15 UT
6 Comments
Getting images of this spot would be interesting because the bands look so strong from our view, I am curious to see if closer to the planet it is more of a transition or it is as harsh as it looks in these pictures.
I hope if it is possible to track a kind of a gap between the borders. Gap of velocity, the boundary between the storms...?
Artistically, this location has the potential to display multiple colors in dynamic interaction along their edges. It may make for a very dramatic image of the storms.