On Wednesday night, Jupiter got hit by something so big that a photographer was able to capture the impact using a telescope in his backyard.
On Wednesday night, Jupiter got hit by something so big that a photographer was able to capture the impact using a telescope in his backyard.
Based on the stunning images, astronomers believe it could’ve been a meteor impact — an event so fleeting, it’s rarely caught on camera.
In the images astrophotographer Ethan Chappel shared, a tiny white spot appears and then winks out on the lower left side of Jupiter.
That briefness is what astronomers would expect from a meteor impact, and it’s also what makes the events so difficult to detect — in fact, Chappel didn’t even notice it at the time.
“I did not see the flash while recording,” he told ScienceAlert. “I only noticed it afterwards thanks to a great piece of software called DeTeCt by Marc Delcroix, which is designed specifically for finding these flashes.”
Once Chappel realized what he’d caught on camera, however, he told ScienceAlert he felt the need to share it with “people who would find the results useful” — and it seems those people are happy he did.
“To get a video like that, I’ve never seen anything like that before,” University of Southern Queensland astronomer Jonti Horner told ScienceAlert. “That’s just totally breathtaking.”
Based on the stunning images, astronomers believe it could’ve been a meteor impact — an event so fleeting, it’s rarely caught on camera.
In the images astrophotographer Ethan Chappel shared, a tiny white spot appears and then winks out on the lower left side of Jupiter.
That briefness is what astronomers would expect from a meteor impact, and it’s also what makes the events so difficult to detect — in fact, Chappel didn’t even notice it at the time.
“I did not see the flash while recording,” he told ScienceAlert. “I only noticed it afterwards thanks to a great piece of software called DeTeCt by Marc Delcroix, which is designed specifically for finding these flashes.”
Once Chappel realized what he’d caught on camera, however, he told ScienceAlert he felt the need to share it with “people who would find the results useful” — and it seems those people are happy he did.
“To get a video like that, I’ve never seen anything like that before,” University of Southern Queensland astronomer Jonti Horner told ScienceAlert. “That’s just totally breathtaking.”