Cassini Spacecraft Captures Images And Sounds Of Big Saturn Storm

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July 06, 2011

Dwayne C. Brown 
Headquarters, Washington                                
202-358-1726 
dwayne.c.brown@xxxxxxxx 

Jia-Rui Cook 
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif. 
818-354-0850 
jccook@xxxxxxxxxxxx 



RELEASE: 11-220

CASSINI SPACECRAFT CAPTURES IMAGES AND SOUNDS OF BIG SATURN STORM

WASHINGTON -- Scientists analyzing data from NASA's Cassini spacecraft 
now have the first-ever, up-close details of a Saturn storm that is 
eight times the surface area of Earth. 

On Dec. 5, 2010, Cassini first detected the storm that has been raging 
ever since. It appears at approximately 35 degrees north latitude on 
Saturn. Pictures from Cassini's imaging cameras show the storm 
wrapping around the entire planet covering approximately 1.5 billion 
square miles (4 billion square kilometers). 

The storm is about 500 times larger than the biggest storm previously 
seen by Cassini during several months from 2009 to 2010. Scientists 
studied the sounds of the new storm's lightning strikes and analyzed 
images taken between December 2010 and February 2011. Data from 
Cassini's radio and plasma wave science instrument showed the 
lightning flash rate as much as 10 times more frequent than during 
other storms monitored since Cassini's arrival to Saturn in 2004. The 
data appear in a paper published this week in the journal Nature. 

"Cassini shows us that Saturn is bipolar," said Andrew Ingersoll, an 
author of the study and a Cassini imaging team member at the 
California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, Calif. "Saturn is not 
like Earth and Jupiter, where storms are fairly frequent. Weather on 
Saturn appears to hum along placidly for years and then erupt 
violently. I'm excited we saw weather so spectacular on our watch." 

At its most intense, the storm generated more than 10 lightning 
flashes per second. Even with millisecond resolution, the 
spacecraft's radio and plasma wave instrument had difficulty 
separating individual signals during the most intense period. 
Scientists created a sound file from data obtained on March 15 at a 
slightly lower intensity period. 

Cassini has detected 10 lightning storms on Saturn since the 
spacecraft entered the planet's orbit and its southern hemisphere was 
experiencing summer, with full solar illumination not shadowed by the 
rings. Those storms rolled through an area in the southern hemisphere 
dubbed "Storm Alley." But the sun's illumination on the hemispheres 
flipped around August 2009, when the northern hemisphere began 
experiencing spring. 

"This storm is thrilling because it shows how shifting seasons and 
solar illumination can dramatically stir up the weather on Saturn," 
said Georg Fischer, the paper's lead author and a radio and plasma 
wave science team member at the Austrian Academy of Sciences in Graz. 
"We have been observing storms on Saturn for almost seven years, so 
tracking a storm so different from the others has put us at the edge 
of our seats." 

The storm's results are the first activities of a new "Saturn Storm 
Watch" campaign. During this effort, Cassini looks at likely storm 
locations on Saturn in between its scheduled observations. On the 
same day that the radio and plasma wave instrument detected the first 
lightning, Cassini's cameras happened to be pointed at the right 
location as part of the campaign and captured an image of a small 
bright cloud. 

Because analysis on that image was not completed immediately, Fischer 
sent out a notice to the worldwide amateur astronomy community to 
collect more images. A flood of amateur images helped scientists 
track the storm as it grew rapidly, wrapping around the planet by 
late January 2011. 

The new details about this storm complement atmospheric disturbances 
described recently by scientists using Cassini's composite infrared 
spectrometer and the European Southern Observatory's Very Large 
Telescope. The storm is the biggest observed by spacecraft orbiting 
or flying by Saturn. NASA's Hubble Space Telescope captured images in 
1990 of an equally large storm. 

The Cassini-Huygens mission is a cooperative project of NASA, the 
European Space Agency and the Italian Space Agency. NASA's Jet 
Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena manages the mission for the 
agency's Science Mission Directorate in Washington. The radio and 
plasma wave science team is based at the University of Iowa, Iowa 
City, where the instrument was built. The imaging team is based at 
the Space Science Institute in Boulder, Colo. 

For images and an audio file of the storm, visit: 



http://www.nasa.gov/cassini 

	
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