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Storms on Saturn are so huge that their traces last hundreds of years

Every couple of decades Saturn develops a huge storm, and now researchers have found that the atmosphere keeps chemical records of those storms for hundreds of years

By Leah Crane

11 August 2023

A radio image of Saturn showing traces of past storms

A radio image of Saturn shows traces of past storms. The broad, bright band near the top of the image is the aftermath of a 2010 storm

R. J. Sault and I. de Pater

When it rains on Saturn, it pours. Every 10 to 20 Earth years, Saturn experiences enormous storms kilometres wide, which look like huge white blotches in the atmosphere with tails stretching all the way around the planet. Now, scientists have found that remnants of these tempests stick around in Saturn鈥檚 atmosphere for hundreds of years.

They found these traces using the Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array in New Mexico to map ammonia on Saturn. Ammonia moves through giant planets’ atmospheres in a similar way to the movement of water through Earth鈥檚 atmosphere, so at the University of Michigan and his colleagues sought to examine how it behaved in the aftermath of Saturn鈥檚 most recent storm in 2010. What they found instead was evidence that Saturn’s atmosphere was still being affected by storms that occurred as early as 1876, and perhaps even earlier.

鈥淲e know that these storms are big, but based on our daily experience of weather we鈥檝e never considered the possibility that these storms can leave such a long remnant after hundreds of years,鈥 says Li. 鈥淥n Earth, weather comes and goes, but on Saturn it sticks around.鈥

The anomalies they found were areas of the atmosphere in which ammonia was depleted at higher altitudes but relatively abundant at lower altitudes. These most likely correspond to areas where ammonia rained down from the upper atmosphere, possibly in the form of hail-like 鈥渕ushballs鈥, and then evaporated and hung around as vapour in the lower atmosphere.

鈥淥n Earth, if you have a heavy rain you accumulate water on the ground in puddles,鈥 says Li. 鈥淏ut on giant planets there鈥檚 no surface, so where could that rain go? It just evaporates.鈥

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They found patches of anomalies corresponding to all six of the giant storms that have been observed on Saturn since 1876, and one additional patch that they think came from a storm that occurred decades earlier than that. The way that the anomalies have moved since the storms were active may help us learn about winds and currents within Saturn.

Surprisingly, these observations of Saturn鈥檚 weather pose a sharp contrast to similar observations of storms on Jupiter, which could help us unravel the inner workings of gas giants more generally. 鈥淭hey have similar compositions, they have similar gravity, but why is the weather so different? It鈥檚 these contrasts that can help us understand giant planets,鈥 says Li.

Journal reference:

Science Advances DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.adg9419

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