Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Space NASA Science

NASA's Jupiter Mission Juno Reveals Giant Polar Storms (bbc.com) 21

NASA's Juno mission to the gas giant Jupiter has reached its halfway mark and has revealed new views of cyclones at the poles. The BBC reports: As it orbits the planet every 53 days - Juno performs a science-gathering dive, speeding from pole to pole. Its sensors take measurements of the composition of the planet, in an effort to decipher how the largest world in our Solar System formed. Mapping the magnetic and gravity fields should also expose Jupiter's structure.

But images from JunoCam -- a camera that was intended to capture images that could be shared with the public -- has already given us some surprising insights. "When we made our first pass over the poles, we knew we were seeing a territory on Jupiter we had never seen before," said Dr Candice Hansen, from the Planetary Science Institute in Arizona. "What we did not expect was that we would see these orderly polygons of cyclones; huge storms - twice the size of Texas."

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

NASA's Jupiter Mission Juno Reveals Giant Polar Storms

Comments Filter:
  • by Anonymous Coward

    Why is this surprising? Saturn has a hexagonal pattern near its north pole. This arises from strong horizontal wind shears and the resulting barotropic instability. The result is that the flow breaks down into periodic vortices. This can be demonstrated in lab experiments and we observe it on Earth at other scales of motion. The eyewall of a hurricane frequently isn't circular, but tends to break down into a pentagon shape with five persistent mesovortices. The same process is responsible, just at a differe

  • by Anonymous Coward

    What does this even mean? How many Arizonas is that? Are we talking edge to edge laid out, and if so which orientation? There's a damn reason Europe went with the metric system and not the Texas system.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      What does this even mean? How many Arizonas is that? Are we talking edge to edge laid out, and if so which orientation? There's a damn reason Europe went with the metric system and not the Texas system.

      You are over-thinking it. They simply mean that those cyclones are the biggest cyclones on this side of the Mississippi.

    • Most importantly, do they or do they not have a panhandle?

    • by necro81 ( 917438 )

      twice the size of Texas

      What does this even mean?

      It means that it's time for Michael Bay to start work on Armageddon 2. [ref [youtu.be]]

    • What does this even mean?

      It means "almost as big as Alaska"....

      It also means that an article written for an American audience, quoting an American scientist (who presumably wants her audience to understand her), uses comparatives understandable to most Americans....

  • The Juno mission has already reported [space.com] solar storms on Jupiter in the past, in April, and images/video of them, including some earlier stuff from November of 2017 [nasa.gov].

    Not to sound like I'm undermining the idea of learning more about Jupiter, but are they just going to report this every single time Juno goes by the poles?
    • by jd ( 1658 ) <imipak@ y a hoo.com> on Friday December 14, 2018 @06:48AM (#57802570) Homepage Journal

      And that's part of the point. The storms at the poles are incredibly stable. They're the same storms as raged a year ago. Simulations of atmospheres like Jupiter's, either in the lab or on a computer, do show lots of short-lived storms, but usually those drift together to form a giant red spot.

      There has been a question as to whether they've shown any other stable storms and the general consensus, insofar as I can ascertain, is no. I know of no simulation showing hexagonal storms, either. However, there will be plenty of simulations I don't know of, one of those might. That it caught everyone on the hop, it wasn't a prediction made in advance, suggests that it was not in any simulation.

      Which means that there are complex processes on Saturn and Jupiter that we're not sure of.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        > I know of no simulation showing hexagonal storms, either.

        Have a look at a synoptic chart that covers the south pole (Antartica) some time. What you have to remember is that our planet has a land mass at the southern pole and Jupiter does not. Due to all of the land close to the northern pole, the same weather conditions are not possible.

        http://www.bom.gov.au/australia/charts/viewer/index.shtml?type=mslp-precip&tz=AEDT&area=SH&model=G

        The hexagonal pattern is not far off what we observe tod

Our OS who art in CPU, UNIX be thy name. Thy programs run, thy syscalls done, In kernel as it is in user!

Working...