{"count":5,"on_page":1,"offset":3,"next_page":false,"comments":[{"JunoCommentID":"1244","Comment":"
Is this the great red spot or something different? If it is different, are these near each other are are they at different poles\/areas? <\/p>","JunoMisc":"0","R_VaultID":null,"Likes":"0","Flags":"0","AdminApproved":"0","ApprovedBy":"0","AdminRemoved":"0","R_JunoUserID":"14242","R_JunoPOIID":"1","R_JunoCampaignID":null,"R_JunoCommentID":null,"R_TopLevelCommentID":"0","hasReplies":"0","Advanced":"0","R_JunoVoteRound":"0","R_AnalysisID":"0","IsRemoved":"0","RemovedBy":"0","UpdatedTS":"2019-05-10 02:07:26","InsertedTS":"2019-05-10 02:07:26","Nickname":"Shorland-06","specialist":"0","Media":[],"Replies":[],"nice_date":"2019-05-10 02:07 UT","commentMarkup":"
Is this the great red spot or something different? If it is different, are these near each other are are they at different poles\/areas? <\/p><\/div>
This isn't well resolve, but I believe it's an anticyclonic vortex, like the Great Red Spot, known officially as "Oval BA" but sometimes also informally called "Red Spot Junior" or the "little red spot". It was like the white ovals further south that were labelled FA, BC and DE, all of which merged over a few years, with the Ovals labelled BC, DE and FA merging into each other in that sequence and in that order: BC-DE-FA formed BA. It's the second largest vortex that has a distinctive red color. (The third is a smaller anticyclonic vortex in the northern hemisphere.)<\/p>","JunoMisc":"0","R_VaultID":null,"Likes":"0","Flags":"1","AdminApproved":"1","ApprovedBy":"4","AdminRemoved":"0","R_JunoUserID":"22","R_JunoPOIID":"1","R_JunoCampaignID":null,"R_JunoCommentID":null,"R_TopLevelCommentID":"0","hasReplies":"0","Advanced":"0","R_JunoVoteRound":"0","R_AnalysisID":"0","IsRemoved":"0","RemovedBy":"0","UpdatedTS":"2015-12-21 14:00:01","InsertedTS":"2015-12-20 01:08:35","Nickname":"Glenn","specialist":"1","Media":[],"Replies":[],"nice_date":"2015-12-20 01:08 UT","commentMarkup":"
This isn't well resolve, but I believe it's an anticyclonic vortex, like the Great Red Spot, known officially as \"Oval BA\" but sometimes also informally called \"Red Spot Junior\" or the \"little red spot\". It was like the white ovals further south that were labelled FA, BC and DE, all of which merged over a few years, with the Ovals labelled BC, DE and FA merging into each other in that sequence and in that order: BC-DE-FA formed BA. It's the second largest vortex that has a distinctive red color. (The third is a smaller anticyclonic vortex in the northern hemisphere.)<\/p><\/div>
I think it might be a can of spilled paint from Mother Nature's pallet?<\/p>","JunoMisc":"0","R_VaultID":null,"Likes":"0","Flags":"1","AdminApproved":"1","ApprovedBy":"4","AdminRemoved":"0","R_JunoUserID":"360","R_JunoPOIID":"1","R_JunoCampaignID":null,"R_JunoCommentID":null,"R_TopLevelCommentID":"0","hasReplies":"1","Advanced":"0","R_JunoVoteRound":"0","R_AnalysisID":"0","IsRemoved":"0","RemovedBy":"0","UpdatedTS":"2017-09-01 09:34:00","InsertedTS":"2015-12-18 19:20:02","Nickname":"Holliman-17","specialist":"0","Media":[],"Replies":[{"JunoCommentID":"11","Comment":"Naturally!\r\n","JunoMisc":"0","R_VaultID":null,"Likes":"0","Flags":"1","AdminApproved":"1","ApprovedBy":"4","AdminRemoved":"0","R_JunoUserID":"360","R_JunoPOIID":"1","R_JunoCampaignID":null,"R_JunoCommentID":"9","R_TopLevelCommentID":"8","hasReplies":"0","Advanced":"0","R_JunoVoteRound":"0","R_AnalysisID":"0","IsRemoved":"0","RemovedBy":"0","UpdatedTS":"2017-09-01 09:34:00","InsertedTS":"2015-12-18 22:08:41","RE_TS":"2015-12-18 19:22:43","RE_JunoUserID":"4","Nickname":"Holliman-17","specialist":"0","RE_Nickname":"bzznzo"}],"nice_date":"2015-12-18 19:20 UT","commentMarkup":"
I think it might be a can of spilled paint from Mother Nature's pallet?<\/p><\/div>
Naturally!<\/p><\/div>