A team of astronomers, led by Thibault Cavalie, from the Astrophysics Laboratory in Bordeaux, France, has tracked one of these molecules (hydrogen cyanide) to directly measure stratospheric "jets" on Jupiter (narrow bands of wind in the atmosphere, like Earth's jet streams). .
AND They reach speeds of up to 400 meters per second.
SOUL
These wind speeds, equivalent to about 1,450 km/h, are more than double the maximum storm speeds reached in Jupiter's Great Red Spot and more than triple the wind speed measured in the strongest tornadoes on Earth.
Measuring wind speeds in Jupiter's stratosphere using cloud-tracking techniques is impossible due to the absence of clouds in this part of the atmosphere, so to directly measure Jupiter's mid-atmosphere winds for the first time Jupiter, the ALMA set (Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array).
The comet Shoemaker-Levy 9, which collided with the gas giant in spectacular fashion in 1994. This impact produced new molecules in Jupiter's stratosphere, where they have been moving with the winds ever since. What has been done is to trace one of these molecules (hydrogen cyanide).
The team used 42 of ALMA's 66 high-precision antennas, located in the Atacama Desert in northern Chile, to analyze hydrogen cyanide molecules that have been moving in Jupiter's stratosphere since the Shoemaker impact. -Levy 9. According to Thibault Cavalié:
These ALMA results open a new window for the study of the regions of Jupiter with auroras, something truly unexpected just a few months ago.
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The news
Jupiter's stratospheric winds are measured for the first time and they triple the speed of the strongest tornadoes on Earth
was originally published in
Xataka Science
by
Sergio Parra
.