Jupiter’s Great Red Spot (GRS) has been on Jupiter since the first telescope was able to image Jupiter’s surface features. Red Spot Jr. appeared in the spring of 2006, smaller than the GRS and located in a lower latitude. Now there is a new red spot in the same area discovered in May 2008 by the Hubble Space Telescope and the Keck Telescope in Hawaii. The small red spot is in the same latitude as the GRS and on a collision course. GRS may absorb the new red spot or may swirl it away. Red spots in the turbulent atmosphere of Jupiter indicate large storms.