This photograph was taken by the Voyager spacecraft on its “grand tour” of the solar system and shows Jupiter as seen from a distance of 37.3 million kilometers. This outer- space perspective, free of the blurring effects of the Earth’s atmosphere, makes it easy to see the intense activity in Jupiter’s upper atmosphere, and especially the turbulence of the planet’s belts and zones, with their boundaries marked by eddies and swirls uncannily reminiscent of Vincent van Gogh’s brush strokes in his famous painting Starry Night. Also visible in this image are smaller versions of the Great Red Spot, some of which appear as yellow rather than red ovals. Like their larger cousin, the spots are really storms, although much smaller and