Journal Article10.1038/NATURE10205
A giant thunderstorm on Saturn
Georg Fischer,William S. Kurth,D. A. Gurnett,P. Zarka,Ulyana A. Dyudina,Andrew P. Ingersoll,Shawn P. Ewald,Carolyn C. Porco,A. Wesley,C. Go,Marc Delcroix +10 more
TL;DR: Observations of a giant thunderstorm at planetocentric latitude 35° north that reached a latitudinal extension of 10,000 kilometres about three weeks after it started in early December 2010, which developed an elongated eastward tail with additional but weaker storm cells that wrapped around the whole planet by February 2011.
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Abstract: Lightning discharges in Saturn’s atmosphere emit radio waves with intensities about 10,000 times stronger than those of their terrestrial counterparts. These radio waves are the characteristic features of lightning from thunderstorms on Saturn, which last for days to months. Convective storms about 2,000 kilometres in size have been observed in recent years at planetocentric latitude 35° south (corresponding to a planetographic latitude of 41° south). Here we report observations of a giant thunderstorm at planetocentric latitude 35° north that reached a latitudinal extension of 10,000 kilometres—comparable in size to a ‘Great White Spot’—about three weeks after it started in early December 2010. The visible plume consists of high-altitude clouds that overshoot the outermost ammonia cloud layer owing to strong vertical convection, as is typical for thunderstorms. The flash rates of this storm are about an order of magnitude higher than previous ones, and peak rates larger than ten per second were recorded. This main storm developed an elongated eastward tail with additional but weaker storm cells that wrapped around the whole planet by February 2011. Unlike storms on Earth, the total power of this storm is comparable to Saturn’s total emitted power. The appearance of such storms in the northern hemisphere could be related to the change of seasons, given that Saturn experienced vernal equinox in August 2009.
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Citations
The Exoplanet Handbook: Formation and evolution
Michael Perryman
- 01 May 2011
TL;DR: An overview of the processes described in this chapter is as follows in this paper, where the authors start with star formation in molecular clouds, and then gravitationally accumulate their mantles of ice and/or gas.
The global vortex analysis of Jupiter and Saturn based on Cassini Imaging Science Subsystem
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explore vortices with diameters larger than 1000 km on Jupiter and Saturn, and find that the concentration of vortice is completely different between the two hemispheres, especially in the latitude band around 40°N where the 2010 giant storm occurred.
Cassini's Grand Finale
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TL;DR: After more than a decade exploring Saturn and its moons, the Cassini mission is in its closing act as mentioned in this paper, which is an encore performance stuffed with science, including a final plunge into Saturn's atmosphere.
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Bob Owens
TL;DR: This study reviews detection techniques and observations of planetary lightning by spacecraft, landers, and radio telescopes, highlighting future missions, including ExoMars and Akatsuki, which may yield lightning observations on Venus in 2016.
Multiple convective storms within a single cyclone on Saturn
Jacob L. Gunnarson,Kunio M. Sayanagi,Georg Fischer,Trevor Barry,A. Wesley,Ulyana A. Dyudina,Shawn P. Ewald,Andrew P. Ingersoll +7 more
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors describe a cyclone at 50∘N in the atmosphere of Saturn that was the source of eight separate convective storms, which were identified using images from the Cassini Imaging Science Subsystem (ISS) and ground-based telescopes.
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