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Spectacular storm rages on Saturn’s south pole

A hurricane-like storm nearly as wide as the Earth is locked above Saturn's south pole, but scientists are at a loss to explain how it formed
A hurricane-like vortex swirls on Saturn's south pole, where towering clouds cast shadows around them
A hurricane-like vortex swirls on Saturn鈥檚 south pole, where towering clouds cast shadows around them
(Image: NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute)

A hurricane-like storm two-thirds as wide as the Earth is raging on Saturn鈥檚 south pole, new images from the Cassini spacecraft reveal. Such clear hurricane-like features have never before been seen on any other planet, but scientists are not sure what is causing them.

The dark eye of the 鈥渉urricane鈥 spans about 8000 kilometres and is surrounded by rings of clouds that tower about 30 to 75 kilometres above it. Watch a 0.6 mB taken over a period of three hours.

These eye-wall clouds have never been seen anywhere other than on Earth, where they form in a process of convection when moist air flows across an ocean and rises. They drop rain in a ring around a region of falling air, which is the eye of a hurricane.

But Saturn鈥檚 storm also differs from hurricanes on Earth because it is fixed in place 鈥 above the south pole 鈥 and is not powered by an ocean, since Saturn is a gaseous planet.

鈥淚t looks like a hurricane, but it doesn鈥檛 behave like a hurricane,鈥 says Andrew Ingersoll, a member of Cassini鈥檚 imaging team at Caltech in Pasadena, US. 鈥淲hatever it is, we鈥檙e going to focus on the eye of the storm and find out why it鈥檚 there.鈥

It is unclear how long the storm has been there because Cassini has never before seen the pole at such a high resolution. And scientists are still puzzling over how it formed.

Warm spot

鈥淚 don鈥檛 think we really have a good idea of what鈥檚 sourcing it,鈥 says Cassini team member Richard Achterberg, a planetary scientist specialising in atmospheres at NASA鈥檚 Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, US.

The storm may be a seasonal phenomenon that changes over the course of Saturn鈥檚 year, which lasts 29 Earth years. It is currently summertime in the planet鈥檚 southern hemisphere, and both ground-based observations and higher-resolution data from Cassini鈥檚 Composite Infrared Spectrometer (CIRS) show the pole is about 2掳 Celsius warmer than its immediate surroundings.

Mission members will try to observe the storm again with CIRS to study the chemical composition of the atmosphere at the pole. 鈥淲e鈥檙e going to see if there鈥檚 water or something being dragged up from below,鈥 Achterberg told New 杏吧原创. In particular, the team will look for changes in the storm over the next few years, as the southern hemisphere moves into autumn.

Achterberg says the storm appears to be unique in the solar system. Jupiter鈥檚 famous storm, the Great Red Spot, for example, does not have an eye or any surrounding eye-wall clouds. It also drifts slowly around the planet with the winds and is colder than its surroundings, while Saturn鈥檚 storm is warmer.

Whatever its cause, Achterberg says the most striking thing about the storm is simply its appearance. 鈥淲hen you look at it, the shape of those clouds surrounding the pole 鈥 it鈥檚 an amazing image.鈥

Topics: Saturn