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Published September 2013 | Published + Supplemental Material
Journal Article Open

Saturn's visible lightning, its radio emissions, and the structure of the 2009–2011 lightning storms

Abstract

Visible lightning on Saturn was first detected by the Cassini camera in 2009 at ∼35° South latitude. We report more lightning observations at ∼35° South later in 2009, and lightning in the 2010–2011 giant lightning storm at ∼35° North. The 2009 lightning is detected on the night side of Saturn in a broadband clear filter. The 2011 lightning is detected on the day side in blue wavelengths only. In other wavelengths the 2011 images lacked sensitivity to detect lightning, which leaves the lightning spectrum unknown. The prominent clouds at the west edge, or the "head" of the 2010–2011 storm periodically spawn large anticyclones, which drift off to the east with a longitude spacing of 10–15° (∼10,000 km). The wavy boundary of the storm's envelope drifts with the anticyclones. The relative vorticity of the anticyclones ranges up to −f/3, where f is the planetary vorticity. The lightning occurs in the diagonal gaps between the large anticyclones. The vorticity of the gaps is cyclonic, and the atmosphere there is clear down to level of the deep clouds. In these respects, the diagonal gaps resemble the jovian belts, which are the principal sites of jovian lightning. The size of the flash-illuminated cloud tops is similar to previous detections, with diameter ∼200 km. This suggests that all lightning on Saturn is generated at similar depths, ∼125–250 km below the cloud tops, probably in the water clouds. Optical energies of individual flashes for both southern storms and the giant storm range up to 8 × 10^9 J, which is larger than the previous 2009 equinox estimate of 1.7 × 10^9 J. Cassini radio measurements at 1–16 MHz suggest that, assuming lightning radio emissions range up to 10 GHz, lightning radio energies are of the same order of magnitude as the optical energies. Southern storms flash at a rate ∼1–2 per minute. The 2011 storm flashes hundreds of times more often, ∼5 times per second, and produces ∼10^(10) W of optical power. Based on this power, the storm's total convective power is of the order 10^(17) W, which is uncertain by at least an order of magnitude, and probably is underestimated. This power is similar to Saturn's global internal power radiated to space. It suggests that storms like the 2010–2011 giant storm are important players in Saturn's cooling and thermal evolution.

Additional Information

© 2013 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivative Works License, which permits non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. Received 19 March 2013. Revised 17 June 2013. Accepted 6 July 2013. Available online 20 July 2013. This research was supported by the NASA Cassini Project. GF is supported by a Grant from the Austrian Science Fund FWF (P24325-N16).

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Created:
August 22, 2023
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October 25, 2023