+

Cookies on the Business Insider India website

Business Insider India has updated its Privacy and Cookie policy. We use cookies to ensure that we give you the better experience on our website. If you continue without changing your settings, we\'ll assume that you are happy to receive all cookies on the Business Insider India website. However, you can change your cookie setting at any time by clicking on our Cookie Policy at any time. You can also see our Privacy Policy.

Close
HomeQuizzoneWhatsappShare Flash Reads
 

NASA's Juno spacecraft flew above Jupiter's Great Red Spot and discovered that the vortex churns up to 310 miles deep

Oct 29, 2021, 05:19 IST
Business Insider
Jupiter and its Great Red Spot, photographed by the Hubble Space Telescope on June 27, 2019. NASA, ESA, A. Simon (Goddard Space Flight Center) and M.H. Wong (University of California, Berkeley)
  • Jupiter's Great Red Spot may extend much deeper below the planet's clouds than scientists previously thought.
  • NASA's Juno probe flew past the vortex in 2019, and its data suggests the storm is up to 310 miles deep.
Advertisement

Jupiter's iconic Great Red Spot may extend even deeper into the planet's atmosphere than scientists thought.

NASA's Juno spacecraft zipped past the Great Red Spot - an anticyclone large enough to swallow Earth - twice in 2019. Measurements from those flights are now revealing the storm's structure in far more detail than telescope images can show. That data suggests that the vortex probably extends anywhere from 186 to 310 miles deep (200 to 500 kilometers) - far below Jupiter's clouds.

"The Great Red Spot is as deep within Jupiter as the International Space Station is high above our heads," Marzia Parisi, a Juno scientist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, said in a press briefing on Thursday. "If we were standing in the eye of the cyclone, we would be immersed in it from the sea level to beyond the orbit of the ISS."

The Juno probe has been circling Jupiter, flying past its poles and even some of its moons, for the last five years. Prior to its latest visits to the Great Red Spot, the spacecraft hadn't flown past the giant storm since July 2017. Back then, Juno's measurements indicated that the vortex extended about 200 miles into Jupiter's atmosphere.

That was an astonishing depth to scientists at the time - it's about 50 to 100 times deeper than Earth's oceans. But now, Juno's latest flybys have revealed that the storm may extend far further down than that.

Advertisement

Scientists animated this Juno image of the Great Red Spot based on velocity data from the spacecraft and models of the storm's winds. NASA/JPL-Caltech/SwRI/MSSS/Gerald Eichstadt/Justin Cowart

"I think most of the scientific community, they were thinking that the Great Red Spot was very shallow," Parisi said. "There were two schools of thought, of course, between people that thought it was going to stop in the first layers of the atmosphere, and others that thought that maybe it will even go all the way down to the center of the planet. It was surprising, actually, to see it go so deep."

Even so, the vortex's height is nothing compared to its width: 10,000 miles across. That's 1.3 times the width of Earth.

"It's a pancake, because it's so wide at the top," Scott Bolton, who leads the Juno team at Southwest Research Institute, San Antonio, said in the briefing. "But that pancake is much thicker than what we would have anticipated."

An illustration depicts the size and depth of Jupiter’s Great Red Spot. JunoCam Image data: NASA/JPL-Caltech/SwRI/MSSS; JunoCam Image processing by Kevin M. Gill (CC BY); Earth Image: NASA

The researchers published their findings in the journal Science on Thursday.

Something is stopping the Great Red Spot about 300 miles deep

Mysteriously, the jet streams surrounding the Great Red Spot extend even deeper - nearly 1,900 miles (about 3,000 km) below Jupiter's cloud surface. The researchers aren't sure why.

Advertisement

"Obviously there is something at 500 kilometers that is limiting the circulation of the Great Red Spot," Parisi said.

They do know, however, that those jets - distinct bands of gas wrapping around the planet - are keeping the Great Red Spot alive. The storm is wedged between two jet streams that move in opposite directions, powering the spin of the vortex.

Jupiter's Great Red Spot, its most famous storm, has been around for hundreds of years. NASA, ESA, A. Simon/Goddard Space Flight Center, M. H. Wong/University of California, Berkeley, and the OPAL team

"Because we have these new measurements, at this point it's more kind of like reverse engineering," Parisi said. "We know how deep the jet streams are and how deep the Great Red Spot is. So can theoreticians explain why there is such a difference in the depth of the jet streams and the Great Red Spot?"

The Great Red Spot is constantly changing. It has been shrinking and becoming more circular since astronomers began observing it about 150 years ago. Just last month, another group of scientists discovered that winds in the cyclone's outer band have sped up over the last decade, while its inner regions have slowed. Measurements from NASA's Hubble Space Telescope have indicated that the Great Red Spot is getting taller as it shrinks.

Some scientists have suggested the storm will collapse and disappear in just a few decades due to its shrinking size, but other researchers disagree.

Advertisement

For its part, Juno is set to continue orbiting and studying Jupiter for another four years.

This post has been updated with new information.

You are subscribed to notifications!
Looks like you've blocked notifications!
Next Article