Here raw footage from NASA’s Cassini and Voyager missions has been combined in a stunning portrait of Saturn and Jupiter. Watch as tiny moons create gravity waves in the rings of Saturn and observe the complicated relative motion between the cloud bands on Jupiter and the swirls and vortices that result. Fluid dynamics are truly everywhere. (Video credit: Sander van den Berg; submitted by Daniel B)
This picture captured by Cassini in February shows a storm on Saturn stretching all the way around the planet. Unlike Earth and Jupiter, which have numerous storms virtually all the time, Saturn tends to store energy in its atmosphere for decades and then release it all at once in mega-storms like this one. #
Back in mid-December, amateur astronomers discovered an enormous new storm on Saturn. The Cassini spacecraft captured this image early in the storm’s history (it now stretches farther around the planet). The fluid dynamics of Saturn’s atmosphere are incredibly complex and well beyond our current understanding, but we can certainly appreciate the majesty of a swirling, turbulent storm half the size of our entire planet. (via APOD, Martian Chronicles)
In the 1970s, the Voyager spacecraft discovered a hexagon near Saturn’s north pole that defied explanation for years. However, researchers have since simulated the shape in a laboratory by placing a fast-spinning ring on the top surface of a slowly spinning column of fluid. Fluorescent dye is used to visualize the flow pattern. #
(Source: dx.doi.org)