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How different are Jupiter 's gaseous layers and Earth's oceans? Perhaps not as much as you expect. Lia Siegelman, a physical oceanographer at the University of California, San Diego’s Scripps Institution of Oceanography, has been studying Jupiter through the lens of Earth's oceans to determine what powers the gas giant's raging cyclones. "Jupiter is basically an ocean of gas," she said in a statement .

Related: During the solar system's chaotic era, Jupiter may have helped form Earth's moon Siegelman's original research , published in 2022, demonstrated that Jovian cyclones are powered by convection much in the same way Earth's storms are. Following up on that study, she and her team are now analyzing filaments, or "wispy tendrils" found between the Jupiter's vortices, seen in satellite imagery of the gas giant taken by NASA's Juno spacecraft. Calculating the horizontal wind speed of the world's clouds and filaments through an analysis of infrared images, Siegelman noticed that the filaments appeared to behave similarly to fronts in Earth's ocean and atmosphere, like cold fronts or storm fronts.



These fronts represent a boundary between masses with different densities (on Earth , that's usually dependent on temperature of the atmosphere and salinity of the ocean). Fronts are typically associated with strong winds or currents along their edges, which could help power Jupiter's cyclones. The team then used methods from oceanography and atmospheric science to calculate the ver.

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