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Off-Topic >> Everything and Nothing

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vineyardsaker
Weather Guru


Reged: Wed
Posts: 150
Loc: New Smyrna Beach, FL
The biggest hurricane in the entire solar system
      #74142 - Fri Nov 10 2006 10:26 AM Attachment (337 downloads)

Huge 'hurricane' rages on Saturn

A hurricane-like storm, two-thirds the diameter of Earth, is raging at Saturn's south pole, new images from Nasa's Cassini space probe reveal.

Measuring 5,000 miles (8,000km) across, the storm is the first hurricane ever detected on a planet other than Earth.

Scientists say the storm has the eye and eye-wall clouds characteristic of a hurricane and its winds are swirling clockwise at 350mph (550km/h).

However, unlike Earth hurricanes it seems stuck at the pole, not drifting.

"It looks like a hurricane, but it doesn't behave like a hurricane," Dr Andrew Ingersoll, a member of Cassini's imaging team at the California Institute of Technology said. "Whatever it is, we're going to focus on the eye of this storm and find out why it's there."

Though Jupiter's Great Red Spot storm moves counter-clockwise, and is far bigger than the storm on Saturn, it does not have the eye and eye-wall that mark out a hurricane.

An Earth hurricane's eye and eye-walls form when warm, moist air flows inwards across an ocean's surface and rapidly rises vertically, dropping heavy rain in a circular band around descending air in the eye.

But Saturn is a gaseous planet therefore this storm does not have an ocean at its base.

The Saturn storm is bigger not only in diameter than an Earth hurricane, but in height too, with a ring of huge clouds towering 20-45 miles above the well-developed eye - two to five times higher than in storms on Earth.

One Nasa scientist, Michael Flasar, told Reuters news agency that the storm looked just like water swirling down a bath plug hole, only on a colossal scale.

"We've never seen anything like this before," Mr Flasar said. "It's a spectacular-looking storm."

Fourteen frames of the storm were captured by the Cassini spacecraft over the course of three hours on 11 October 2006.

Cassini was passing about 210,000 miles from the ringed-planet as it continues its exploration of Saturn and its moons.

Cassini entered into orbit around Saturn on 1 July 2004. Later that year, it released the piggybacked Huygens probe towards the planet's largest moon, Titan.

Huygens touched down on Titan on 14 January 2005, sending back data on the moon's atmosphere, weather and its surface.

The Cassini-Huygens mission is a co-operative project of the US space agency (Nasa), the European Space Agency (Esa) and the Italian Space Agency (Asi).

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/science/nature/6135450.stm

(make sure to look at the awesome attached picture!)

--------------------
Charley(eyewall), Ivan, Jeanne, Dennis, Wilma, Irma, Ian (eyewall), Nicole

Edited by vineyardsaker (Fri Nov 10 2006 10:28 AM)


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RedHurricaneRanger
Registered User


Reged: Mon
Posts: 6
Loc: Newport News, VA
Re: The biggest hurricane in the entire solar system [Re: vineyardsaker]
      #74304 - Mon Feb 12 2007 09:49 AM

Quote:

first hurricane ever detected on a planet other than Earth




You mentioned the Great Red Spot of Jupiter which itself is a hurricane. Kind of contradicting, isn't it ?

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Just because I'm 13 years old...and autistic doesn't mean I can't be a expert hurricane tracker.


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Ed DunhamAdministrator
Former Meteorologist & CFHC Forum Moderator (Ed Passed Away on May 14, 2017)


Reged: Sun
Posts: 2565
Loc: Melbourne, FL
Re: The biggest hurricane in the entire solar system [Re: RedHurricaneRanger]
      #74305 - Mon Feb 12 2007 04:38 PM

Within the post itself there does not appear to be any contradiction since the post also mentions that "Jupiter's Great Red Spot ... does not have the eye and eye-wall that mark out a hurricane." However there is contradiction amongst scientists regarding that point, i.e., some still consider Jupiter's Great Red Spot to be a hurricane and that the eye and eyewall cannot be visually observed because of higher layers of gaseous clouds.
Cheers,
ED


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