4.8 Article

Polar lightning and decadal-scale cloud variability on Jupiter

Journal

SCIENCE
Volume 318, Issue 5848, Pages 226-229

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/science.1147912

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Although lightning has been seen on other planets, including Jupiter, polar lightning has been known only on Earth. Optical observations from the New Horizons spacecraft have identified lightning at high latitudes above Jupiter up to 80 degrees N and 74 degrees S. Lightning rates and optical powers were similar at each pole, and the mean optical flux is comparable to that at nonpolar latitudes, which is consistent with the notion that internal heat is the main driver of convection. Both near-infrared and ground-based 5-micrometer thermal imagery reveal that cloud cover has thinned substantially since the 2000 Cassini flyby, particularly in the turbulent wake of the Great Red Spot and in the southern half of the equatorial region, demonstrating that vertical dynamical processes are time-varying on seasonal scales at mid-and low latitudes on Jupiter.

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