On June 3, 2010, Anthony Wesley discovered a Jupiter impact event. The 2010 impact was then discovered to have also been captured on video by amateur astronomer Christopher Go in the Philippines. Read more
Hubble scrutinises site of mysterious flash and missing cloud belt on Jupiter
New and detailed observations from the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope have provided insights into two recent events on Jupiter: the mysterious flash of light seen on 3 June and the recent disappearance of the planet's dark Southern Equatorial Belt. At 22:31 (CEST) on 3 June 2010 Australian amateur astronomer Anthony Wesley saw a two-second-long flash of light on the disc of Jupiter. He was watching a live video feed from his telescope. In the Philippines, amateur astronomer Chris Go confirmed that he had simultaneously recorded the transitory event on video. Wesley was the discoverer of the now world-famous July 2009 impact. Read more
On June 3rd, 2010, something hit Jupiter. A comet or asteroid descended from the black of space, struck the planet's cloudtops, and disintegrated, producing a flash of light so bright it was visible in backyard telescopes on Earth. Soon, observers around the world were training their optics on the impact site, waiting to monitor the cindery cloud of debris which always seems to accompany a strike of this kind.
After being hit hard by a 500-meter-wide asteroid last year, Jupiter has once again been hit by a bright, Earth-sized fireball rising above the planet's atmosphere on June 3 at 4:31 p. m. ET - the two impacts, hot on the heels of each other put to question the astronomers' belief that Jupiter impacts are very rare. While the images showing the "bruise" of the last year collision of the asteroid with Jupiter have been captured by the Hubble telescope, the slamming of a space rock this time round was captured by Australia's Anthony Wesley and Philippines' Christopher Go. Read more
An object that hit Jupiter last year with a force equivalent to a few thousand nuclear bombs, which left it with a scar the size of Pacific Ocean was probably an asteroid, say astronomers. Images of the "bruise" captured by the Hubble telescope show the aftermath of an asteroid striking a planet. Read more
A Filipino astronomer is one of two people in the world known to have caught on video an asteroid hitting Jupiter early Friday morning local time that caused a fireball the size of Earth. Cebu-based Christopher Go, 39, a furniture manufacturer, said that he recorded the video at around 4:30 a.m. Friday. Read more
An amateur astronomer has spotted an object crashing into the surface of Jupiter for the first time. Anthony Wesley, an Australian computer programmer, spotted a bright flash and alerted professional and amateur sky-gazers to the unique collision. Read more
At approximately 20:31:29 utc on the morning on June 3 a large fireball was imaged on Jupiter by two amateur astronomers - myself (Anthony Wesley) and Chris Go from the Philippines. Read more