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Cassini imaging of Saturn : southern hemisphere winds and vortices (2007)

Abstract
High-resolution images of Saturn’s southern hemisphere acquired by the Cassini Imaging Science Subsystem between February and October 2004 are used to create maps of cloud morphology at several wavelengths, to derive zonal winds, and to characterize the distribution, frequency, size, morphology, color, behavior, and lifetime of vortices. Nonequatorial wind measurements display only minor differences from those collected since 1981 and reveal a strong, prograde flow near the pole. The region just southward of the velocity minimum at 40.7ºS is especially active, containing numerous vortices, some generated in the proximity of convective storms. The two eastward jets nearest the pole display periodicity in their longitudinal structure, but no direct analogs to the northern hemisphere’s polar hexagon or ribbon waves were observed. Characteristics of winds and vortices are compared with those of Saturn’s northern hemisphere and Jupiter’s atmosphere.

Publication details
Download http://hdl.handle.net/2014/40368
Publisher American Geophysical Union
Repository DSpace at Jet Propulsion Laboratory (United States)
Keywords Saturn, Cassini Imaging Science Subsystem, vortices, Jupiter atmosphere, planetary atmospheres, meteorology
Type Article
Language Englisch