I’m wondering whether that was a government Jupiter probe or if Smith Industries sent their own probe to Jupiter. In any case, the Space Coupe with the doctors indeed crashed on the surface of Jupiter.
As I’ve mentioned before, Jupiter doesn’t actually have a solid surface. It’s a mass of swirling gases, but I suppose it works okay in a comic strip like this. It could even be a picture from one of Jupiter’s moons, like Ganymede, the biggest moon in the solar system.
“On June 7, 2021, NASA’s Juno spacecraft made a flyby of Ganymede. The photos – one from the Jupiter orbiter’s JunoCam imager and the other from its Stellar Reference Unit star camera – show the surface in remarkable detail, including craters, clearly distinct dark and bright terrain, and long structural features possibly linked to tectonic faults.”
Good morning™, everyone!
I’m wondering whether that was a government Jupiter probe or if Smith Industries sent their own probe to Jupiter. In any case, the Space Coupe with the doctors indeed crashed on the surface of Jupiter.
As I’ve mentioned before, Jupiter doesn’t actually have a solid surface. It’s a mass of swirling gases, but I suppose it works okay in a comic strip like this. It could even be a picture from one of Jupiter’s moons, like Ganymede, the biggest moon in the solar system.
“On June 7, 2021, NASA’s Juno spacecraft made a flyby of Ganymede. The photos – one from the Jupiter orbiter’s JunoCam imager and the other from its Stellar Reference Unit star camera – show the surface in remarkable detail, including craters, clearly distinct dark and bright terrain, and long structural features possibly linked to tectonic faults.”