Cassini Gets Amazing Views of Saturn's Hexagon 50
A reader sends this excerpt from a JPL news release:
"NASA's Cassini spacecraft has obtained the highest-resolution movie yet of a unique six-sided jet stream, known as the hexagon, around Saturn's north pole. This is the first hexagon movie of its kind (GIF), using color filters, and the first to show a complete view of the top of Saturn down to about 70 degrees latitude. Spanning about 20,000 miles (30,000 kilometers) across, the hexagon is a wavy jet stream of 200-mile-per-hour winds (about 322 kilometers per hour) with a massive, rotating storm at the center. There is no weather feature exactly, consistently like this anywhere else in the solar system. 'The hexagon is just a current of air, and weather features out there that share similarities to this are notoriously turbulent and unstable,' said Andrew Ingersoll, a Cassini imaging team member at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena. 'A hurricane on Earth typically lasts a week, but this has been here for decades — and who knows — maybe centuries.'"
Let me be among the first... (Score:2)
...to say the .gif is mesmerizing, and I have no clue what I'm looking at.
If you later said, "Lol, that's a false color prostate exam camera," I wouldn't be shocked.
Re:Let me be among the first... (Score:5, Funny)
I have no clue what I'm looking at.
The Saturnian Department of Defense? The funny thing is, it looks like it's full of staaaaaaa... [carrier lost]
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Nothing to see here, move along
Re:Let me be among the first... (Score:5, Funny)
...to say the .gif is mesmerizing, and I have no clue what I'm looking at.
If you later said, "Lol, that's a false color prostate exam camera," I wouldn't be shocked.
Really? I'd be shocked. This is Saturn not Uranus.
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Fry: Oh. What's it called now?
Farnsworth: Urectum.
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I'm no doctor, but if I ever see a girl with a bunghole that looks like that, I'm running, naked or not. :)
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I have no clue what I'm looking at.
James Woods: What? Look, I'm texting you her picture. Just tell me if you think she's hot enough.
Peter: What is this a picture of? Is that the bottom of a white pumpkin?
Be Proud USA (Score:5, Insightful)
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My coffee milk frother does this. It's not that unique.
Re:Compass (Score:5, Funny)
No, it’s just that God prefers Allen wrenches.
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I just measure things by comparing them to a few trusty old plancks.
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A mole of plancks would be a usable universal length; just exactly how long that is is another question. :)
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Not only is it not universal, it will also still be really small. About 9 nanometres.
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No, it’s just that God prefers Allen wrenches.
That explains why celestial mechanics is so wacky.
Why a Hexagon? (Score:3, Insightful)
Why isn't it a spiral; why do the winds run roughly straight, then make a sharp turn and then run roughly straight again? I am not an astro-physicist, hell I don't even know if that's the correct term. But if someone out there knows why the peculiar shape I'd be most intrigued to find out.
Re:Why a Hexagon? (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.planetary.org/blogs/emily-lakdawalla/2010/2471.html [planetary.org]
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WOW that was a great link, and the explanations were easy to understand.
what I did like was the particle presentation video of the hexagon, very cool.
I got to admit, i might have observed this before, but never paid attention to it.
in the video, you could see and understand how the points of the hexagon are made.
THANKS!!!
Frustrating... (Score:1)
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It does not "beg" any questions.
*sigh*
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Still, the phrase "begs the question" sounds like to a teenager that the scenario is just asking for a question to pop up.
In 50 years, your classical definition of "to beg a question" will be notated as "obsolete" --- because people in the media screw up the usage all the time. And it is annoying to witness
But long term --- the phrase will eventually always mean what it sounds like it is suppo
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Neither use means "avoiding the question".
The common use of "...which begs the question" means "...which prompts me to ask". While the variant of the circular reasoning fallacy called "Begging the Question" is used to mean "assuming or forcing the answer in the wording of the question".
[Since the "Begging" in the latter is a rare/archaic/obscure term for "assuming", it seems unreasonable to pour scorn on people who use the common English meanings of "begs" and "the question".]
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Oh really?
Collins English Dictionary [thefreedictionary.com]
beg the question
a. to evade the issue
b. to assume the thing under examination as proved
c. to suggest that a question needs to be asked the firm's success begs the question: why aren't more companies doing the same?
Webster's College Dictionary [thefreedictionary.com]
Idioms:
1. beg the question,
a. to assume the truth of the very point raised in a question.
b. to evade the issue.
c. to raise the question; inspire one to ask.
Some random luddite wh
What is going on (Score:5, Informative)
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Re:What is going on (Score:4, Interesting)
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It would be stranger if they did have something like it, considering how different they are.
The short version of BattleApple's post above is "because fluid dynamics". Other gas giants do not have the same wind pattern gradients.
The opposite of strange - rather expected, actually.
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This would've gotten a lot more views had it said, "Cassini Gets Amazing Views of Saturn's Box"
Or a title like "Cassini's false color prostate exam."
Stolen from mythosaz http://science.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=4527543&cid=45621677 [slashdot.org]
I know something better (Score:4, Funny)
I want some pics of that.
Round (Score:1)
Also I think that Saturn hexagon actually consists of 7 smaller hurricanes.
.O.O
O.O.O
.O.O
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That's not a bad idea, but the real solution is circular harmonics. Basically, the atmospheric conditions inside the hexagon and outside it are pretty different. The boundary vibrates like a circular wave. Since it is a wave, it only vibrates at fixed frequencies.
If you look closely at the picture, you'll see that there is a "dip" between every two "peaks" (which you represent as an O).
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Does it use circular logic?
8 frames is a "movie" (Score:2)
Re:8 frames of clear skies (Score:1)
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http://www.universetoday.com/15322/ [universetoday.com]
Saturn has the lowest density of all the planets in the Solar System. The actual number is 0.687 grams per cubic centimeter. This is actually less dense than water; if you had a large enough pool of water, Saturn would float.
Just for comparison, Jupiter has an average density of 1.33 grams per cubic centimeter. So it wouldn’t float on water. And Earth, the densest planet in the Solar System, measures 5.51 grams/cubic centimeter.
That's no hexagon... (Score:2)
...that's an A-T field!
Where's my socket wrench? (Score:1)
Reminds me of the head of a bolt. Do you suppose Saturn is metric or standard?
In all seriousness, I think it's both weird yet fascinating that the clouds have formed such a (nearly) perfect shape. It almost looks like the boundary wanted to develop into a sort of "sine wave" but other influences flattened portions of it out.
The gif is really amazing (Score:2)
The thought of a planetary-scale standing wave just boggles my mind.