Sentences with phrase «storm juno»

Allianz Global Assistance received more than 300 calls in their Travel Operations Center from customers impacted by Winter Storm Juno.
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I suppose that its helpful in retrospect to refer to the big storm that happened in January 2015 as Juno, but the conspiracy theorist in me has all the usual suspects lining up to talk about extreme weather like super storm Sandy and Super Storm Juno and lets not forget Katrina........
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«Winter Storm Juno» was straight from the marketing folks at TWC.
Winter Storm Juno has come and gone and New York City is left to deal with the aftermath: dirty, slushy snow.
I had to start thinking of something a little exciting in order to distract myself from this Snow Storm Juno... right now it's 9:15 pm on 1.26 and the wind is howling, there is already a foot of snow on Long Island and I am stuck in my house till who knows when (I am simply praying it doesn't mess up my flight to Disney on Friday).
I don't recommend large doses of cacao for toddlers, especially while snowed in during winter storm Juno!

Not exact matches

Hansen explained that Juno will fly too close to the storm — about 5,600 miles above it — to capture the whole thing in one view at that point.
«Juno and her cloud - penetrating science instruments will dive in to see how deep the roots of this storm go and help us understand how this giant storm works and what makes it so special,» Bolton said in a NASA statement.
Hansen explained that Juno would fly close to the storm — about 5,600 miles above it — to capture the whole thing in one view at that point.
This view shows Jupiter's south pole littered with monster storms, a view no one had glimpsed until Juno came along, during the spacecraft's eighth flyby.
On July 10, Juno returned one of the closest - ever views of Jupiter's Great Red Spot — a larger - than - Earth storm that is actually shrinking.
Having already endured the ten - year siege of Troy and its fall, having lost his wife while making his escape with a small band of surviving Trojans, Aeneas must still suffer the wrath of Junostorm, plague and warfare — as he journeys from the ruins of Troy (on the western coast of modern Turkey) to Italy.
But since Valentine's Day is around the corner and Juno (and several other storms) trapped me inside, I made these mini mocha cupcakes with raspberry cream.
On a future flyby, Juno will try to use gravity data to detect the storm at depths of thousands of kilometers.
«These guys in particular — Gerald and Seán — gave us products from Juno's earlier encounters with Jupiter that showed all these «little» storms just 25, 50 kilometers wide popping up from the cloud tops of the planet's south tropical zone,» Hansen says.
As the spacecraft swooped 9,000 kilometers above the giant storm, Juno's microwave radiometer peered through the deep layers of cloud, measuring the atmosphere's temperature down hundreds of kilometers.
Data from the first pass of NASA's Juno spacecraft over the incessant storm show that its clouds stretch at least 350 kilometers down into the planet's atmosphere.
Named Juno, the NASA orbiter will collect data that could elucidate the planet's origins and evolution, gather details about its long - lived storm (the Great Red Spot) and send back the highest - resolution color images of Jupiter to date.
The first - ever detailed look at Jupiter's polar regions — captured during Juno's first orbit last August — reveals chaotic swirls of storms, some measuring up to 1400 kilometers across, researchers report today in Science.
On 10 July, Nasa's Juno spacecraft will provide the first up - close view of Jupiter's Great Red Spot — a storm possibly existing for more than 350 years
On the other hand, as of now, the Juno spacecraft has weathered the storm of electrons surrounding Jupiter better than the team could have ever imagined.
Washington: Nasa's Juno spacecraft is set to fly directly over Jupiter's Great Red Spot — the gas giant's iconic 16,000 - kilometre - wide storm.
The flyover of Juno spacecraft over the Great Spot would be the first up - close and personal view of the giant storm.
Using data gathered from Juno's sophisticated suite of instruments, researchers have found that Jupiter's storms aren't confined to the uppermost layers of the Jovian atmosphere.
«Now, Juno and her cloud - penetrating science instruments will dive in to see how deep the roots of this storm go, and help us understand how this giant storm works and what makes it so special,» said Bolton.
Juno has flown closer to the solar system's most famous storm than any other spacecraft to take the most detailed images to date.
NASA has released stunning new images of Jupiter's Great Red Spot that were captured earlier this week by the US space agency's Juno spacecraft and which provides an up - close look at what is believed to be the largest and most powerful storm system in the solar system.
Data from NASA's Juno spacecraft are revealing new details of Jupiter, from swirling cyclones at the planet's poles (south pole, shown) to its great white ovals, storms and stripes of gas.
It will likely take weeks or perhaps months for the science team to analyze the data gathered by Juno's instruments in order to reveal some of the enduring storm's secrets.
Using infrared data from NASA's Juno spacecraft, scientists have assembled a 3D map of Jupiter's north polar region, showing details of a huge central cyclone and eight surrounding storms.
But Juno's cloud - penetrating radar should provide insight into Jupiter's turbulent atmosphere and what the GRS's structure is like deep inside the storm, while other instruments study the planet's interior structure and magnetosphere.
«The Great Red Spot is basically the largest storm in the entire solar system,» says Scott Bolton, Juno's principal investigator.
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Early results from NASA's Juno mission to Jupiter portray the giant planet as a complex world with Earth - sized polar cyclones, deep - diving storm systems, and a lumpy magnetic field generated deeper than once thought.
When Juno finally beamed back images of the north pole, scientists were shocked to find eight cyclones circling a single storm in the middle.
Alberto Adriani, a co-investigator for Juno's Jovian Infrared Auroral Mapper (JIRAM) and lead author of the paper, explained that the storms are likely the result of Jupiter's heat and rotation speed.
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