NASA captures monster hurricane from space
US: NASA’s spacecraft Cassini took this amazing colourful picture of
a Saturn storm that resembles a hurricane on Earth. The centre eye of
the storm on Saturn is about 1,250 miles wide. That’s 20 times larger
than the average hurricane eye on Earth, that’s the distance between
Dallas and Washington, DC. Usually, hurricanes on Earth have a small eye
and much larger outer bands. But incredibly on Saturn 1,250 miles is the
distance of the centre eye only. The entire storm could be several
thousand miles more.
As for the wind speed in the storm, usually in hurricanes the
strongest wind is in the centre of the storm around what is called “the
eye wall” of the hurricane, and tends to get weaker as you get to the
edge of the hurricane. The wind speed on the outer edge of the cloud
band of Saturn’s hurricane is 330 mph and the winds in the centre eye
are four times faster than some of the strongest hurricanes on Earth. To
compare Saturn’s storm to hurricanes that affected the U.S., the
strongest hurricane to hit the U.S. was Camille in 1969 with winds of
190 mph.
One of the interesting facts is that usual hurricanes on Earth feed
off the water vapour from the warm ocean water. That gives it the needed
energy for the hurricane to develop. But on Saturn there is no body of
water nearby for this storm to feed off. Instead it is feeding off of
small amounts of water vapour in Saturn’s hydrogen atmosphere.
Another interesting fact: Hurricanes on Earth form usually in the
tropical latitudes and move north due to the forces acting on them. But
Saturn’s storm is located at the planet’s north pole that has made it
stationary with nowhere further north to go. Because of this discovery,
NASA scientists believe that it could have been there for years.
ABC NEWS
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