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Originally Posted by mswhin63
Very clear storm, cant help the conditions. Nice job
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Thanks Malcolm.
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Originally Posted by michaellxv
Not much you can do about the weather. The storm looks bigger in this image.
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Thanks Michaell.
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Originally Posted by bird
Still shows up very nicely in the images Trev, well done considering!
cheers, Bird
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Thanks Bird, really hanging out to catch this in good seeing, Dec 22nd looks promising.
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Originally Posted by DarkRevenge
What a storm! Visible even in that conditions!
Thanks for sharing, Trevor.
Cheers.
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Thanks Luis.
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Originally Posted by Clayton
Nice catch Trevor
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Thanks Clayton.
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Originally Posted by Shiraz
Hi Trevor. Crikey that must be bright. Do you know what mechanism is behind the bright colour - is it lightning, albedo change, chemistry or a combination? edit: did a bit of reading - convection driven ammonia ice clouds?
regards Ray
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Thanks Ray. Saturn has a hydrogen rich atmosphere with traces of methane & ammonia. There are 3 distinct cloud layers. An upper layer of ammonia ice crystals, an intermediate layer of ammonium hydro sulfide ice crystals with a lower layer of water ice crystals.
The SED's (Saturn Electrostatic Discharge) detected by the Cassini RPWS (Radio & Plasma Wave Science) instrument are the result of lightning caused by the rapid vertical motion of material originating from the water ice cloud layer at a depth of about 200km. This rapid vertical motion is caused by a poorly understood heat source deep within the atmosphere.
The material surging upward from the water ice crystal cloud layer punches through the upper ammonia ice crystal cloud layer and mushrooms out generating the white spots ( SED's related storm clouds) that we image from Earth.
Earlier this year while we were tracking an active SED's related storm another instrument onboard Cassin (Infrared spectrometer), which is operated by a team at JPL, was able to be used to analyze this material that was in effect dredged up from deep within the atmosphere. This was a first for the Cassini mission.
I have attached a link to a JPL news release regarding this and what there IR spectrometer found.
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/news.cfm?release=2010-143