This image shows (from left to right) impact sites C, A, E, and H at
00:05 UT on 7/19, as seen during a 10-second break between heavy
clouds: the weather prevented taking any other images that night.  The
image is a composite of two frames: a high-quality image of Jupiter
which showed only part of the disk has been supplemented with a much
poorer quality image of the rest of the disk, taken through cloud.

The image is taken at 2.3 microns in a methane absorption band,
which causes high-altitude clouds, which are above most of the
methane absorption, to appear very bright.  A, the oldest impact
site, was 52 hours old when the image was taken, and H, on the
right (evening) limb of Jupiter, was less than 5 hours old.
The Great Red Spot is dimly visible above the H impact site,
and the satellite Ganymede is visible in the upper right.

Image taken by John Spencer (Lowell Observatory) and Darren DePoy
(Ohio State University), using the OSIRIS infrared camera at the
4-meter telescope at Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory,
Chile.

