Changes in Jupiter's 13-cm Synchrotron Radio Emission Following the Impact of Comet Shoemaker-Levy-9Results of an observing program to monitor the synchrotron radio emission from Jupiter's inner radiation belts before, during and after the impact of Comet SL-9 are reported. The observations were made at 2295 MHz as part of the NASA-JPL Jupiter Patrol, a long-term radio astronomy monitoring program begun in 1971. The data indicate that the intensity of the synchrotron emission at 13 cm wavelength increased by 27 percent within a few days after the comet impacts; the longitudinal beaming curve was distorted during the week of impacts; the magnetic latitude beaming curves flattened after the week of impacts suggesting an increase in the emission at higher magnetic latitudes; and the decay of the enhanced emission is consistent with an exponential with a time constant of ~125 days. The reported changes following the SL-9 impact are unprecedented in the 23-year history of the Jupiter Patrol.