Times Colonist

Cyclones churn over the poles of Jupiter

- MARCIA DUNN

CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida — Jupiter’s poles are blanketed by geometric clusters of cyclones and its atmosphere is deeper than scientists suspected.

These are among the discoverie­s reported by four internatio­nal research teams Wednesday, based on observatio­ns by NASA’s Juno spacecraft circling Jupiter.

One group uncovered a constellat­ion of nine cyclones over Jupiter’s north pole and six over the south pole. The wind speeds exceed Category 5 hurricane strength in places, reaching 350 kilometres an hour.

The massive storms haven’t changed position much — or merged — since observatio­ns began.

Team leader Alberto Adriani of Italy’s National Institute for Astrophysi­cs in Rome was surprised to find such complex structures. Scientists thought they’d find something similar to the six-sided cloud system spinning over Saturn’s north pole.

“We were wrong about it,” he said via email.

Instead, they found an octagon-shaped grouping over the north pole, with eight cyclones surroundin­g one in the middle, and a pentagon-shaped batch over the south pole. Each cyclone measures several thousand kilometres across.

The fifth planet from our sun, gas giant Jupiter is by far the largest planet in our solar system. Launched in 2011, Juno has been orbiting Jupiter since 2016 and peering beneath the thick ammonia clouds. It’s only the second spacecraft to circle the planet; Galileo did it from 1995 to 2003.

Another of the studies in this week’s journal Nature finds that Jupiter’s crisscross­ing east-west jet streams actually penetrate thousands of kilometres beneath the visible cloud tops. Refined measuremen­ts of Jupiter’s uneven gravity field enabled the Weizmann Institute of Science’s Yohai Kaspi in Rehovot, Israel, and his colleagues to calculate the depth of the jet streams at about 3,000 kilometres.

“The result is a surprise because this indicates that the atmosphere of Jupiter is massive and extends much deeper than we previously expected,” Kaspi said in an email.

By better understand­ing these strong jet streams and the gravity field, Kaspi said scientists can better decipher the core of Jupiter. A similar situation might be occurring at other big gas planets like Saturn, where the atmosphere could be even deeper than Jupiter’s, he said.

Jonathan Fortney of the University of California, Santa Cruz, who was not involved in the research, called the findings “extremely robust” and said they show “high-precision measuremen­ts of a planet’s gravitatio­nal field can be used to answer questions of deep planetary dynamics.”

Using similar techniques, Juno could help scientists determine the depth of Jupiter’s Great Red Spot, a colossal swirling storm, Fortney said in a companion article in the journal.

 ??  ?? This composite image provided by NASA, derived from data collected by the Jupiter-orbiting Juno spacecraft, shows the central cyclone at the planet’s north pole and the eight cyclones that encircle it.
This composite image provided by NASA, derived from data collected by the Jupiter-orbiting Juno spacecraft, shows the central cyclone at the planet’s north pole and the eight cyclones that encircle it.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada