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The Storms May Tell Why Gas Giant Planets Are So Windy

A color image of Jupiter (bottom) and a magnified area of the disturbance in violet light (top), taken with the WFPC2 camera on the Hubble Space Telescope. (NASA and ESA)
by Lori Stiles
Tucson AZ (SPX) Jan 29, 2008
A University of Arizona scientist, observing Jupiter with the Hubble Space Telescope last May, took some of the best images of two unusual giant storms that erupted from the planet last spring. Erich Karkoschka of the UA's Lunar and Planetary Laboratory is co-author on a scientific paper being published about Jupiter's giant storms in the Jan. 24 issue of the journal Nature.

When the Pluto-bound New Horizons spacecraft flew by Jupiter in February 2007, it sent back images that showed a relatively quiet Jupiter, Karkoschka said. Then, on March 25, other astronomers using the Hubble telescope captured a view that showed the beginnings of an intense disturbance at Jupiter's middle northern latitudes, which is where the planet's strongest winds blow.

Such giant storms are rare. The last ones occurred in 1990 and 1975, before Hubble and other high-resolution telescopes were in operation. Scientists are interested in such eruptive storms because they are clues to what's going on deeper inside giant gas planets to fuel the jet winds that dominate atmospheres such as those belonging to Jupiter and Saturn.

Augustin Sanchez-Lavega from Spain's Universidad del Pais Vasco coordinated professional and amateur astronomers who monitored the storms as they developed in the following days.

Amateur astronomers play a major role in these kinds of observations, Karkoschka said. "Since professional telescopes are relatively rigid in their schedules, it was great to have amateurs making observations."

Karkoschka has been using the Hubble telescope to study how high small hazes reach into Jupiter's upper atmosphere. He makes these observations as the planet's largest moon, Ganymede, dips from view behind the planet. Hubble observations are scheduled months in advance, and the storms didn't appear on the side of the planet Karkoschka was monitoring on April 9.

But the storms, initially seen at 250 miles across, grew to about five times that size in less than a day. They rapidly formed two 19-mile-high plumes of ammonia ice and water spewing from Jupiter's deep water clouds.

On May 1, Karkoschka used filters ranging from ultraviolet to visible to infrared on the Hubble telescope to make some of the best images that characterize the structure of the disturbance. Astronomers won more time on the Hubble to view the storms again in early June, but by that time, the disturbance was gone, leaving behind a band of a different color, he noted.

Karkoschka has been studying the atmospheres of outer planets for more than 20 years, first as a graduate student and since as a researcher with the Lunar and Planetary Laboratory. He has used the Hubble Space Telescope to take images of Saturn and its moon Titan, as well as Uranus and Neptune, to study the vertical profile of their gases and aerosols.

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The Mystery Of Jupiter's Jets Uncovered
Usurbil, Basque Country (SPX) Jan 25, 2008
At the end of March 2007, scientists all over the world observed with surprise and awe a rare change in the atmosphere of Jupiter. A giant perturbation occurred amongst its clouds and two extremely bright storms erupted in the middle latitudes of the northern hemisphere, where its most intense jet stream - reaching speeds of 600 kilometers per hour - resides.







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