news.yale.edu - A new explanation for Jupiter’s great, shrinking ‘Spot’ | YaleNews
home - domains - news.yale.edu
Yale University news OPA OPAC press releases
Goto Site
https://news.yale.edu/2024/07/18/new-explanation-jupiters-great-shrinking-spot
Site Description
A steady diet of smaller storms may be what fuels Jupiter’s Great Red Spot — and a decline in small storms may be causing it to shrink.
Example Site Content
A new explanation for Jupiter’s great, shrinking ‘Spot’ | YaleNews Skip to main content calendar subscribe Facebook Instagram YouTube RSS Feeds YaleNews Alumni Arts & Humanities Business Campus & Community Environment Health & Medicine International Law Science & Technology Social Sciences Videos In Focus In Memoriam Search form Search A new explanation for Jupiter’s great, shrinking ‘Spot’A steady diet of smaller storms may be what fuels Jupiter’s Great Red Spot — and a decline in small storms may be causing it to shrink.By Jim SheltonJuly 18, 20243 min read Share this with Facebook Share this with X Share this with LinkedIn Share this with Email Print this Hubble image of Jupiter. [Credit: NASA, ESA, A. Simon (Goddard Space Flight Center) and M.H. Wong (University of California, Berkeley)] Jupiter’s Great Red Spot — the biggest windstorm in the solar system — is shrinking, and a new study may help explain why. Located in Jupiter’s southern hemisphere, the Great Red Spot is a swirling, red-orange oval of high pressure more than 10,000 miles wide. It consistently blows more than 200 miles per hour in a counterclockwise direction, making it technically an anticyclone. And it has been shrinking for the better part of a century, particularly over the past 50 years. While its latitudinal extent has remained relatively consistent, its longitudinal extent has contracted from 40 degrees in the late 19th century to 14 degrees in 2016, when NASA’s Juno spacecraft arrived at the planet for a series of orbits. “Many people have looked at the Great Red Spot over the last 200 years and were as fascinated by it as I am,” said Caleb Keaveney, a Ph.D. student in Yale’s Graduate School of Arts and Sciences and lead author of a new study in the journal Icarus. “A lot of those people were not professional astronomers — they were just passionate and curious. That, plus the curiosity I see in people when I talk about my work, makes me feel like part of something bigger than myself.” Some of the curiosity relating to the Great Red Spot has to do with the many mysteries that surround it, despite the fact it that it has been studied extensively. Astronomers don’t know precisely when the spot formed, why it formed, or even why it is red. For the study, Keaveney, who is part of Yale’s Department of Earth & Planetary Sciences, and his co-authors, Gary Lackmann of North Carolina State University and Timothy Dowling of the University of Louisville, focused on the influence of smaller, transient storms on the Great Red Spot. The researchers conducted a series of 3D simulations of the spot using the Explicit Planetary Isentropic-Coordinate (EPIC) model, an atmospheric model for planetary applications developed by Dowling in the 1990s. Some of these simulated interactions between the Great Red Spot and smaller storms of varying frequency and intensity, while another group of control simulations left out the small storms. A comparison of the simulations suggested that the presence of other storms strengthened the Great Red Spot, causing the spot to grow larger. “We found through numerical simulations that by feeding the Great Red Spot a diet of smaller storms, as has been known to occur on Jupiter, we could modulate its size,” Keaveney said. In part, the researchers based their modeling on long-lived high-pressure systems observed closer to home, in Earth’s atmosphere. These systems — known as “heat domes,” or “blocks” — occur regularly in the westerly jet streams that circulate across Earth’s mid-latitudes and play a major role in extreme weather events such as heat waves and droughts. The longevity of these “blocks” has been linked to interactions with smaller, transient weather mechanisms, including high pressure eddies and anticyclones. “Our study has compelling implications for weather events on Earth,” Keaveney said. “Interactions with nearby weather systems have been shown to sustain and amplify heat domes, which motivated our hypothesis that similar interactions on Jupiter could sustain the Great Red Spot. In validating that hypothesis, we provide additional support to this understanding of heat domes on Earth.” Keaveney said additional modeling will allow researchers to refine the new findings — and perhaps shed light on the Great Red Spot’s initial formation. Funding for the re
Websites with similar content
-
thisiswhyimbroke.xyz
This is why im broke
-
pricemon.net
Price Monitor
-
gadgetsnow.indiatimes.com
Technology News, Latest & Popular Gadgets Reviews, Specifications, Prices, Mobile Comparison, Technology Videos & Photos | Gadgets Now
-
epaper.newindianexpress.com
The New Indian Express: ePaper Subscription Online, English Newspaper Subscription, Today Newspaper | epaper Online
-
timesofindia.indiatimes.com
Isro-Nasa mission to ISS: Who is Shubhanshu Shukla? The lead astronaut for Indo-US ISS mission to be second indian in space | India News - Times of India
-
nypost.com
Exclusive | Boeing employees 'humiliated' that SpaceX will save astronauts stuck in space
-
www.aljazeera.com
Boeing’s Starliner returns to Earth – leaving crew behind | Space News | Al Jazeera
-
www.discoverlosangeles.com
Visit Los Angeles. Find Things to Do in LA. California Travel Guides | Discover Los Angeles
-
www.indiatoday.in
Earth receives the first-ever picture of Mercury's South Pole from BepiColombo - India Today
-
gujarati.bseindia.com
Bombay Stock Exchange - BSE Gujarati site for SENSEX, stock quotes and market trends
-
www.dnaindia.com
Chandrayaan-3: ISRO Chief S Somanath reveals how Pragyan Rover discovered minerals on Moon
-
marathi.bseindia.com
Bombay Stock Exchange - BSE Marathi site for SENSEX, stock quotes and market trend
-
www.engadget.com
Environmental groups accuse Amazon of ‘distorting the truth’ in latest clean-energy claim
-
www.beachconnection.net
Solar Sails Now Visible Every Night Above Washington, Oregon, Coast: New Satellite
-
www.wionews.com
Touchdown! Boeing Starliner 'Calypso' lands in the deserts of New Mexico - Science News
-
www.clickorlando.com
SpaceX Falcon 9 booster catches fire, tips over in landing after Florida launch
-
securitybrief.com.au
SecurityBrief Australia - Technology news for CISOs & cybersecurity decision-makers
-
www.businessinsider.in
Latest Business, Stock Market, Economy & Finance News - Business Insider India
-
stocktwits.com
Stocktwits - Stock Market Live Quotes, Social Community Discussions, News, Stock Rankings & Earnings
-
www.iheart.com
What in the Heck Are the Engineers Behind Genesis Doing about FSE with Mike McAlister - Press This WordPress Community Podcast | iHeart
-
www.bseindia.com
BSE (formerly Bombay Stock Exchange) | Live Stock Market updates for BSE SENSEX, Stock Price, Company News & Results
-
wenews.cc
Wenews - Micro News - Daily News pickup
-
netgeninus.com
NetGeninus - Helps you making money, making wealth, creating an strategy