The fragments impacted Jupiter at approximately 45° south latitude and 6.5° longitude from the limb, and 15° from the dawn terminator just out of view of the Earth. Eleven minutes after impact, the point in the atmosphere where the impact occurred would rotate across the limb and 14 minutes later would cross the dawn terminator. The fragments were moving at an angle of 83° from the Jovian north to south axis and struck the cloud tops at about 45°. The following table lists the impact times as seen from the Earth, calculated by Don Yeomans and Paul Chodes.
Predicted Accepted Fragment Date Impact Time Impact Time July (HH:MM:SS) & 1-sigma error A 16 20:00:40 20:11:00 (3 min) B 17 02:54:13 02:50:00 (6 min) C 17 07:02:14 07:12:00 (4 min) D 17 11:47:00 11:54:00 (3 min) E 17 15:05:31 15:11:00 (3 min) F 18 00:29:21 00:33:00 (5 min) G 18 07:28:32 07:32:00 (2 min) H 18 19:25:53 19:31:59 (1 min) J 19 02:40 Missing since 12/93 K 19 10:18:32 10:21:00 (4 min) L 19 22:08:53 22:16:48 (1 min) M 20 05:45 Missing since 7/93 N 20 10:20:02 10:31:00 (4 min) P2 20 15:16:20 15:23:00 (7 min) P1 20 16:30 Missing since 3/94 Q2 20 19:47:11 19:44:00 (6 min) Q1 20 20:04:09 20:12:00 (4 min) R 21 05:28:50 05:33:00 (3 min) S 21 15:12:49 15:15:00 (5 min) T 21 18:03:45 18:10:00 (7 min) U 21 21:48:30 21:55:00 (7 min) V 22 04:16:53 04:22:00 (5 min) W 22 07:59:45 08:05:30 (3 min)
Galileo Image of Impact W
(GIF, 17K)
These four images of Jupiter and the luminous night-side impact
of fragment W of Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 were taken by the Galileo
spacecraft on July 22, 1994. The spacecraft was 238 million kilometers
(148 million miles) from Jupiter at the time, and 621 million kilometers
(386 million miles) from Earth. The spacecraft was about 40 degrees
from Earth's line of sight to Jupiter, permitting this direct view.
The first image, taken at an equivalent time to 8:06:10 Greenwich
Mean Time (1:06 a.m. Pacific Daylight Time), shows no impact. In
the next three images, a point of light appears, brightens so
much as to saturate its picture element, and then fades again,
seven seconds after the first picture. The location is
approximately 44 degrees south as predicted; dark spots to the
right are from previous impacts. Jupiter is approximately 60
picture elements in diameter.
(Courtesy NASA)
Impact of Fragment G
(GIF, 71K)
The impact of Fragment G of Comet Shoemaker-Levy on Jupiter. The
fireball is seen 12 minutes after impact. The impact A site is seen
on the opposite limb of the planet.
(Credit: Dr Peter McGregor & Mark Allen, Australian National
University)
Splash of Fragment G
(GIF, 51K)
The splash of the impact of Fragment G of Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 on
Jupiter. The ring of hot gas is 33,000 kilometers (20,506 miles) wide,
and it was expanding at 4 kilometers (2.5 miles) per second.
(Credit: Dr Peter McGregor & Mark Allen, Australian National
University)
Impact of H-fragment observed at La Silla
(GIF, 51K;
caption)
This image was obtained with the TIMMI instrument at the European
Southern Observatory's 3.6-meter telescope
on July 18, 1994, 20:11 UT. It shows the rising plume above
the impact site of fragment H of comet Shoemaker-Levy 9. The image
was made in the 9.1 - 10.4 micron band in the far-infrared region.
The surface brightness of this plume was about 50 times that of the
Jupiter disk. The temperature was measured as more than 300 K.
(Courtesy European Southern Observatory)
HST UV Image of Impacts H, Q1, R, D, G, L, B, N & Q2
(GIF, 97K;
caption)
This ultraviolet image shows Jupiter's atmosphere at a
wavelength of 2550 Angstroms after many impacts by fragments of comet
Shoemaker-Levy 9. The most recent impactor is fragment R which is
below the center of Jupiter (third dark spot from the right). This
photo was taken by the Hubble Space Telescope
at 3:55 EDT on July 21, about 2.5 hours after R's impact.
A large dark patch from the impact of fragment H is visible rising on
the morning (left) side. Proceeding to the right, other dark spots were
caused by impacts of fragments Q1, R, D and G (now one large spot), and
L, with L covering the largest area of any seen thus far. Small dark
spots from B, N, and Q2 are visible with careful inspection of the
image. The spots are very dark in the ultraviolet because a large
quantity of dust is being deposited high in Jupiter's stratosphere, and
the dust absorbs sunlight.
(Courtesy Hubble Space Telescope Comet Team)
HST Image of Impacts E/F, H, N, Q1, Q2, R and D/G
(GIF, 166K;
JPEG, 26K;
caption)
Image of Jupiter with the Hubble Space Telescope Planetary Camera.
Eight impact sites are visible. From left to right are the E/F complex
(barely visible on the edge of the planet), the star-shaped H site, the
impact sites for tiny N, Q1, small Q2, and R, and on the far right limb
the D/G complex. The D/G complex also shows extended haze at the edge
of the planet. The features are rapidly evolving on time scales of
days. The smallest features in this image are less than 200 kilometers
(124 miles) across.
(Courtesy Hubble Space Telescope Comet Team)
HST Image of Impacts D and G
(GIF, 166K)
This image of Jupiter shows the impact sites of fragments "D" and "G"
from Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9. The large feature was created by the
impact of fragment "G" on July 18, 1994 at 3:28 a.m. EDT. It entered
Jupiter's atmosphere from the south at a 45-degree angle, and the
resulting ejecta appears to have
been thrown back along that direction. The smaller feature to the left
of the fragment "G" impact site was created on July 17, 1994, at 7:45
a.m. EDT by the impact of fragment "D". The "G" impact has concentric
rings around it, with a central dark spot 2,500 kilometers (1,550 miles)
in diameter. This dark spot is surrounded by a thin dark ring
7,500 kilometers (4,661 miles) in diameter. The dark thick outermost
ring's inner edge has a diameter of 12,000 kilometers (7,460 miles) -
about the size of the Earth.
(Courtesy Hubble Space Telescope Comet Team)
HST Views of Comet Fragment G Impact Zone
(GIF, 79K;
caption, 79K)
This image shows two views of the impact zone on Jupiter of fragment G
of Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9. The image on the left was made in green light.
The image on the right is the same field taken through a methane filter.
These images were obtained by the Hubble Space Telescope in the early
morning of July 18, 1994. The impact site is visible as a complex
pattern of circles seen in the lower left of the partial planet image.
The small dark feature to the left of the pattern of circles is the
impact site of fragment D. The dark, sharp ring at the site of the
fragment G impact is 80% of the size of the Earth.
(Courtesy Dr. Heidi Hammel, Massachusetts Institute of Technology/NASA HST)
HST G Plume Image
(GIF, 46K)
These images taken by the Hubble Telescope show the G impact site
through methane, red, green, blue and violet filters.
(Courtesy Hubble Space Telescope Comet Team)
HST A, C and E Impact Sites
(GIF, 43K)
This Hubble image of Jupiter was obtained with a filter at 336 nm
(near-ultraviolet light) at 18:42 UT on 17 July 1994. Three impact
sites (from left to right: C, A, and E) are visible as dark spots
across the lower portion of the image. All other features in this
picture are characteristic of Jupiter's normal state. The feature
created by the impact of A is 23 hours old in this image. The C and E
features are 12 and 5 hours old, respectively. Io
is seen on the left as a dark spot in the northern hemisphere, and the
Great Red Spot is visible on the
right limb.
(Courtesy Hubble Space Telescope Jupiter Imaging Team)
Evolution of the G Impact Site
(GIF, 140K)
This mosaic of Hubble images shows the evolution of the G impact site
on Jupiter. The images from lower right to upper left show: the impact
plume at 07/18/94 07:38 UT (about 5 minutes after the impact); the
fresh impact site at 07/18/94 at 09:19 UT (1.5 hours after impact);
the impact site after evolution by the winds of Jupiter (left), along
with the L impact (right), taken on 07/21/94 at 06:22 UT (3 days after
the G impact and 1.3 days after the L impact); and further evolution of
the G and L sites due to winds and an additional impact (S) in the G
vicinity, taken on 07/23/94 at 08:08 UT (5 days after the G impact).
(Credit: R. Evans, J. Trauger, H. Hammel and the HST Comet Science
Team and NASA)
IRTF Infrared Image of Q & R Impacts
(GIF, local 90K;
caption)
This is a 2.07 micron image of Jupiter taken on the NASA Infrared
Telescope Facility, Mauna Kea, Hawaii, at 08:54 on July 21, 1994.
Io, the closest of the jovian moons, can be seen crossing the planet in
the northwest of the image (top right). The Great Red Spot is visible
in the south east of the planet.
At the collision latitudes, the impact due to Fragment Q is just
setting on the west. Just to the east of it, the R Fragment impact site
shows up very brightly. Another four impact sites form a chain of spots
behind R.
(Courtesy NASA IRTF Comet Science Team)
Impact Sites of C & D fragments
(GIF, 31K)
The impact site of fragment D can be seen at the left of this image
and C at the right.
(Credit: Dr Peter McGregor & Mark Allen, Australian National
University)
Comet SL9 Background Kuiper Belt Objects