The formation of the lightening is very interesting to me. First off it seems to mainly happen within the swirls for some reason, giving many of the individual spouts of lightening to look swirly too like a galaxy kinda. Or like a bunch of little tad poles.
comment by AhmadAyoubAlmullaon 2023-05-24 10:48 UT
Jupiter has a thick atmosphere primarily composed of hydrogen and helium.
Strong storms and erratic weather systems exist within Jupiter's atmosphere. These storms produce powerful downdrafts and updrafts.
Jupiter's atmosphere contains water vapor, which is essential for the development of lightning. The updrafts lift water droplets and ice particles into the storm clouds.
comment by AhmadAyoubAlmullaon 2023-05-24 10:47 UT
Jupiter has a thick atmosphere primarily composed of hydrogen and helium.
Strong storms and erratic weather systems exist within Jupiter's atmosphere. These storms produce powerful downdrafts and updrafts.
Jupiter's atmosphere contains water vapor, which is essential for the development of lightning. The updrafts lift water droplets and ice particles into the storm clouds.
While it would be difficult to capture an image of lightning with a single attempt, perhaps the scope can be narrowed by focusing on areas of higher and lower magnetism or areas where there are higher concentrations of ammonia, potentially helping create "shallow lightning" in the higher reaches of the atmosphere. Even if those images don't capture lightning, they could perhaps still provide some insight, making them worthwhile.
Quisiera saber si hay tormentas eléctricas si también llueve y si es así que condiciones más nesesitariamo para saber si hay vida ya que el agua es uno de los componentes principales para ello
Hola me gustaría saber más cuanto tardarían la unanimidad en mandar una misión aquí y ver si hay vida aunque sea microscópica también si hay vida inteligente como procederíamos para entrar en este lugar ya que podrían tomarnos por invasores y aver represalias contra nuestro planeta
comment by Champigneulles-60on 2021-02-01 03:10 UT
lightning is made when ice molecules rub against each other and that rubbing causes electrons to form or something, and so then positives catch the negatives and lightning strikes so maybe, it might just be different but most likely not...
Have you ever heard a glacier when it calves? It sounds the same as thunder in the sky. It gets cold up there. Things form and unform very quickly, and we only catch the rain, or snow.
While in the outterspace of Nunavut, the same sound would occur on the 10 feet of frozen ice on my lake as would occur in the sky with ICE LIGHTS. We can infer.
Being able to capture pictures of the lightning actively taking place on Jupiter with the JunoCamp would make for a great photograph. Maybe the details from the photo could show us more of how long the lightning appears to last in one location.
This is from the Juno image where you examine the Polar Aurora of Jupiter... This has been processed to illuminate the darkness and reveal how the mixture of Light and darkness are actively stirred into to the atmosphere of Jupiter, here and give comparisons of the terminator spinning across the Planet...
I think a camera that is set up to go off when flashes occur would be a great idea. By inventing this technology there would be no need to take so many photographs.
45 Comments
How the lightning looks great on the flashing
Наверное они формируются из-за наличия на Юпитере какого-то количества воды
The formation of the lightening is very interesting to me. First off it seems to mainly happen within the swirls for some reason, giving many of the individual spouts of lightening to look swirly too like a galaxy kinda. Or like a bunch of little tad poles.
similar to Earth's, occurring only in thunderstorms where water exists in all its phases — ice, liquid, and gas.
similar to Earth's, occurring only in thunderstorms where water exists in all its phases — ice, liquid, and gas.
similar to Earth's, occurring only in thunderstorms where water exists in all its phases — ice, liquid, and gas.
Ten times more violent lightning flashes than have ever been seen on Earth were photographed by the Horizons cameras on Jupiter.
flashes that were uncharacteristically small and “shallow” compared to the lightning previously discovered. In Jupiter
Horizons cameras captured lightning flashes on Jupiter ten times as powerful as anything ever recorded on Earth.
Jupiter has a thick atmosphere primarily composed of hydrogen and helium.
Strong storms and erratic weather systems exist within Jupiter's atmosphere. These storms produce powerful downdrafts and updrafts.
Jupiter's atmosphere contains water vapor, which is essential for the development of lightning. The updrafts lift water droplets and ice particles into the storm clouds.
Jupiter has a thick atmosphere primarily composed of hydrogen and helium.
Strong storms and erratic weather systems exist within Jupiter's atmosphere. These storms produce powerful downdrafts and updrafts.
Jupiter's atmosphere contains water vapor, which is essential for the development of lightning. The updrafts lift water droplets and ice particles into the storm clouds.
Jupiter has a thick atmosphere made mostly of hydrogen and helium, along with some other gases.
Inside Jupiter's atmosphere, there are powerful storms and turbulent weather systems. These storms create strong updrafts and downdrafts.
On earth, tiny compared to Jupiter, we have only one polar cap. There may be a threshold of size for polar caps.
We see the light flashes, yet none talk of glaciers in the sky causing thunder on earth.
C. Luke Gurbin is my name, fwater@mail.com
Anonymity on chat sites causes abuse.
NASA Juno mission should not have anonymity. I do not agree with hiding identities on websites nor doctored comments.
You guys miss out on things.
focus on the job
While it would be difficult to capture an image of lightning with a single attempt, perhaps the scope can be narrowed by focusing on areas of higher and lower magnetism or areas where there are higher concentrations of ammonia, potentially helping create "shallow lightning" in the higher reaches of the atmosphere. Even if those images don't capture lightning, they could perhaps still provide some insight, making them worthwhile.
very good idea, does the space craft have ways of identifying these areas?
Are there certain areas where it is more likely to occur?
places with ammonia or places with high or low magnitisum
its cool
Do you think it's livable for human beings to be on and why hasn't NASA landed a spaceship on it yet like they did on the moon
Quisiera saber si hay tormentas eléctricas si también llueve y si es así que condiciones más nesesitariamo para saber si hay vida ya que el agua es uno de los componentes principales para ello
Hola me gustaría saber más cuanto tardarían la unanimidad en mandar una misión aquí y ver si hay vida aunque sea microscópica también si hay vida inteligente como procederíamos para entrar en este lugar ya que podrían tomarnos por invasores y aver represalias contra nuestro planeta
Gravity reported is said to be 80x earth- you wanna walk on that?
This place spins in ten hours. How could you land on that?
Look how huge it is. It spins as a planet in about ten hours, only.
Breaks your legs just getting outta orbit.
I would like to mention the Venezuelan phenomenon of Catatumbo
In addition to indicating the possibility of having several Ships in this system powered by Jupiter Electricity
I really want to see these pictures!
And also I think those are lightning which is made by the heavy storms continually
I think those are ice acting like mirrors reflecting lights
Keep your observations.
lightning is made when ice molecules rub against each other and that rubbing causes electrons to form or something, and so then positives catch the negatives and lightning strikes so maybe, it might just be different but most likely not...
Have you ever heard a glacier when it calves? It sounds the same as thunder in the sky. It gets cold up there. Things form and unform very quickly, and we only catch the rain, or snow.
https://www.google.com/search?q=pic+glacier+calbong&oq=pic+glacier+calbong&aqs=chrome..69i57j33i10i160l3.7892j0j4&client=ms-android-rogers-ca-revc&sourceid=chrome-mobile&ie=UTF-8
While in the outterspace of Nunavut, the same sound would occur on the 10 feet of frozen ice on my lake as would occur in the sky with ICE LIGHTS. We can infer.
www.clgurbin.weebly.com
Being able to capture pictures of the lightning actively taking place on Jupiter with the JunoCamp would make for a great photograph. Maybe the details from the photo could show us more of how long the lightning appears to last in one location.
Maybe lightning forms different on different planets?
I think the lighting would be very cool to see
I think lightning would be mesmerizing to see. I think that these images would really fascinate the public.
I think the lightning would be fascinating to get pictures of. I wonder how they compare to Earth's lightning storms?
I think it is a great idea, because it might be different than earth's
I think this is worth a shot
yeah i think that it might actually be worth spending time on
This is the Natural Photograph compared to the previous post. Ryan Cornell @RKCornell56 go to Ryan Cornell on Facebook.
This is from the Juno image where you examine the Polar Aurora of Jupiter... This has been processed to illuminate the darkness and reveal how the mixture of Light and darkness are actively stirred into to the atmosphere of Jupiter, here and give comparisons of the terminator spinning across the Planet...
Wow this is very cool
Is this open question? I am thinking to apply method to detect flash. Can I have many examples of this image?
I think a camera that is set up to go off when flashes occur would be a great idea. By inventing this technology there would be no need to take so many photographs.