SCIENCESCIENCE DAILY
Astronomers finally solve Saturn’s decades-long spin mystery
Astronomers used the James Webb Space Telescope to solve a decades-old mystery about Saturn's changing rotation rate. The variation was caused by powerful atmospheric winds, not changes in the planet's speed, with Saturn's northern lights heating the atmosphere to create a self-sustaining cycle of winds, electrical currents, and auroras.
Mentioned
Related Signal
Adjacent reporting
- Saturn’s magnetic field is twisted and scientists just figured out why
- Physicists think they've solved the muon mystery
- Scientists just uncovered a 3 million-year climate mystery in Antarctic ice
- An ancient solar storm left clues in tree rings and a famous poet's diary: 'Red lights in the northern sky'
- JWST maps the weather on a hot gas giant 700 light-years away
- Scientists found a giant magnetic “twist” hidden inside the Milky Way