Saturn's hexagon and Earth's jet streams
Posted: Sat Jun 17, 2017 12:19 pm
A long time ago, before I first saw or heard of the hexagon around Saturn's north pole and long before I had access to the Internet, I read about Earth's jet streams in a book. Part of the northern jet stream was depicted on a map, showing a sine-wave like shape, and the text said it was that shape too. This bothered me because the map was an ordinary one with north at the top. I realised the jet stream wouldn't be anything like a sine wave on the actual globe of the Earth. (I had neither software nor mathematical skills to plot the shape, but I'm very good at visualising things.) I realised the northern arcs of the sine shape would be flattened and the southern arcs sharpened until it looked something like a regular polygon, perhaps an octagon or a hexagon. Without mathematical tools and exact data on the jet streams I couldn't be quite sure; I thought the sides of the polygon might bow in or out, but I was fairly sure of the basic shape.
Many years later I saw APOD featuring Saturn's hexagon, (not today's picture,) and to my surprise it was just like what I figured Earth's jet streams must be like! It's even more regular than I dared to imagine, with barely any curve in the sides at all. It took a while for my past musings to fully come to mind, but now I see it again I'm almost sure Earth and Saturn have something in common here, despite the tremendous difference in size. I wonder if it's a resonance arising from Coriolis forces?
That's about all I can post, my brain hasn't been good for much of anything since a severe illness when I was 12 years old, but I wanted to share this. Drawing conclusions based on things I can visualise is about all I'm good for, and typing them up is a bit hard.
Edit: When I say "Saturn's hexagon," I mean the outer border; the thick band around the dark region. It seems to have a constant thickness. (See https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap170403.html.) That's the part I'm comparing to Earth's jet streams.
-- Ethan Grammatikidis
Feel free to reproduce this post.
Many years later I saw APOD featuring Saturn's hexagon, (not today's picture,) and to my surprise it was just like what I figured Earth's jet streams must be like! It's even more regular than I dared to imagine, with barely any curve in the sides at all. It took a while for my past musings to fully come to mind, but now I see it again I'm almost sure Earth and Saturn have something in common here, despite the tremendous difference in size. I wonder if it's a resonance arising from Coriolis forces?
That's about all I can post, my brain hasn't been good for much of anything since a severe illness when I was 12 years old, but I wanted to share this. Drawing conclusions based on things I can visualise is about all I'm good for, and typing them up is a bit hard.
Edit: When I say "Saturn's hexagon," I mean the outer border; the thick band around the dark region. It seems to have a constant thickness. (See https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap170403.html.) That's the part I'm comparing to Earth's jet streams.
-- Ethan Grammatikidis
Feel free to reproduce this post.