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  • Saturday, November 23, 2024

The truth about Saturn storm


The storm like the storm on Saturn is one of NASA's most attractive realistic discoveries about a planet in our solar system so far.

First seen by Cassini Craft-Craft NASA, this big storm on Saturn is much like one of the earth's storms.

Using Infrared and Red Wavelengths, and Falsely Colored for Detail, The Picture Was Taken At A Height of 420,000 Kilometers (or 260,000 miles)!

Earth's storms often have a small eye surrounded by a larger strip.

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However, The Center of the Storm on Saturn is approximately 2012 Kilometers (1,250 miles) wide.

It is the distance between Dallas and Washington D.c.

This is Twenty Times Larger Than The Center of An Average Earth Hurricane and The Outer Band Can Be Seen For Several Thousand Miles More.

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Usually in a highest wind speed storm in what is called the "central eye" of the storm and weakest near the edges of the outer ring.

Wind speed at the outer edge of Saturn's storm range is up to 530 km / h (330 miles / hour).

In the heart of the center of the storm, they were four times faster than the most recorded winds on earth, these are the winds of the storm Camille in the United States in 1996 measuring a maximum of about 305 KPH

Usually a storm eating steam from the ocean warm water on earth, which is what brings a energy storm needed to grow.

However, but there is no big water body on the Saturn planet, however, and its storm removes a small amount of steam found in Saturen's hydrogen atmosphere.

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Earth's storms are also commonly formed in tropical and moving north due to something called the Coriolis effect in which the Earth's revs to convey a storm acceleration towards the extreme, mainly

Saturn's storm was on the north pole of the planet and therefore stood still, there was no other place to go.

This made NASA scientists believe that the storm for Saturn may have raged many years.

Only in 2009, the sun once again began to shine on Saturn's northern hemisphere again, allowing Cassini to take photos on a large storm.

When it loses Saturn 29 (Earth) year to turn around the sun, the entire northern hemisphere of the planet has been in the darkness since 2004 of Cassini to the planet.

The images of Saturn are the first Sunlit images of the planet since the photos were taken by Craft Voyager 2 during the planetary transfer in 1981.

NASA scientists will continue to study the storm like terrestrial storm.

Although the fact is that it vary in size, power and energy source for soil storm, it carries the same characteristics as the average eye without cloudy, a clockwise rotation in the hemisphere