 The Hubble Space Telescope and the ground-based Gemini Observatory in Hawaii have teamed up with the Juno spacecraft to probe Jupiter's storms. Every 53 days, Juno moves low over the storm systems, detecting high-frequency radio waves, which can then be used to map lightning even on the day side of the planet or from deep inside clouds where flashes are not otherwise visible. Coinciding with each pass, Hubble's visible light images and Gemini's thermal infrared images tell us how thick the clouds are and how deep we are seeing into them. This is an illustration of lightning, convection towers, deep water clouds and clearings in Jupiter's atmosphere. The region illustrated covers a horizontal span one-third greater than that of the continental United States.