• → European Space Agency

    • About Science & Technology

    • For Public

    • For Educators

    • ESA

    • Science & Technology

    • Cassini-Huygens

    • Missions
    • Show All Missions
    • Mission Home
    • Summary
    • Fact Sheet
    • Objectives
    • Mission Team
    • Orbit View
    • Science…

      • Saturn
      • Rings
      • Titan
      • Moons
      • Magnetosphere
    • Huygens Probe
    • Huygens
    • Instruments
    • Engineering
    • Cassini Orbiter
    • 3D Model
    • Instruments
    • Engineering
    • Mission Operations
    • Launch Vehicle
    • Launch Information
    • Approach and Arrival
    • Getting to Saturn
    • Huygens Probe Separation
    • Titan Surface Landing
    • Flybys
    • Science Operations
    • Data Archive
    • Resources
    • News Archive
    • Multimedia Gallery
    • Publication Archive
    • Calendar of Events
    • Services
    • Contact Us
    • Subscribe
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Bookmark and Share

    Thermal Structure and Dynamics of Saturn's Northern Springtime Disturbance

    Publication date: 17 Jun 2011

    Authors: Fletcher, L.N., et al.

    Journal: Science
    Volume: 332
    Issue: 6036
    Page: 1413-1417
    Year: 2011

    Copyright: AAAS

    Saturn's slow seasonal evolution was disrupted in 2010-2011 by the eruption of a bright storm in its northern spring hemisphere. Thermal infrared spectroscopy showed that within a month, the resulting planetary-scale disturbance had generated intense perturbations of atmospheric temperatures, winds, and composition between 20° and 50°N over an entire hemisphere (140,000 kilometers). The tropospheric storm cell produced effects that penetrated hundreds of kilometers into Saturn's stratosphere (to the 1-millibar region). Stratospheric subsidence at the edges of the disturbance produced "beacons" of infrared emission and longitudinal temperature contrasts of 16 kelvin. The disturbance substantially altered atmospheric circulation, transporting material vertically over great distances, modifying stratospheric zonal jets, exciting wave activity and turbulence, and generating a new cold anticyclonic oval in the center of the disturbance at 41°N.

    Link to Publication

    Last Update: 17 Jun 2011

    • Shortcut URL
    • http://sci.esa.int/jump.cfm?oid=48812

    Connect with us

    • RSS
    • Youtube
    • Twitter
    • Flickr
    • Google Buzz
    • Livestream
    • Subscribe
    • App Store
    • ESA Science Twitter

    Follow ESA science

    • Copyright 2000 - 2013 © European Space Agency. All rights reserved.

    • Terms and Conditions