NASA has released images from the orbiting Cassini spacecraft of lightning flashes seen during a huge storm on Saturn that encircled its northern hemisphere. The lightning flashes were recorded as bluish spots in the middle of swirling clouds in a 2011 storm, the largest ever seen up close on the ringed planet, NASA\'s Jet Propulsion Laboratory reported Wednesday. Scientists said the recently released images mark the first time lightning has been detected in visible wavelengths on the side of Saturn illuminated by the sun. \"We didn\'t think we\'d see lightning on Saturn\'s day side -- only its night side,\" said Ulyana Dyudina, a Cassini imaging team member at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, Calif. \"The fact that Cassini was able to detect the lightning means that it was very intense.\" The intensity of the flashes is comparable to the strongest flashes on Earth, scientists said, with the visible energy alone estimated to be about 3 billion watts lasting for 1 second. \"As summer storm season descends upon Earth\'s northern latitudes, Cassini provides us a great opportunity to see how weather plays out at different places in our solar system,\" Linda Spilker, JPL Cassini project scientist, said. \"Saturn\'s atmosphere has been changing over the eight years Cassini has been at Saturn, and we can\'t wait to see what happens next.\"
GMT 11:03 2018 Friday ,19 January
Microwave ovens are cooking the environment: studyGMT 21:24 2017 Tuesday ,07 November
China unveils massive island-building vesselGMT 21:20 2017 Tuesday ,07 November
Mexico captures rare vaquita porpoise in bid to save speciesGMT 21:16 2017 Tuesday ,07 November
Hundreds of dead sea turtles found floating off El SalvadorGMT 00:05 2017 Monday ,30 October
Birthplace of Apostle Peter found in IsraelGMT 23:54 2017 Sunday ,29 October
Bear shot in Italy after attacking walkerGMT 23:49 2017 Sunday ,29 October
NATO condemns North Korea’s sixth nuclear testGMT 17:23 2017 Friday ,07 July
8-foot-long python found in planeMaintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©
Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©
Send your comments
Your comment as a visitor