1 00:00:00,000 --> 00:00:07,320 [no audio content] 2 00:00:07,320 --> 00:00:11,120 My name is Bridget Hesman and I'm a planetary scientist at NASA's Goddard 3 00:00:11,139 --> 00:00:14,660 Space Flight Center. And I studies storms on Saturn. 4 00:00:14,660 --> 00:00:20,180 Great white spots on Saturn are these large storms that erupt about once every 5 00:00:20,180 --> 00:00:24,950 year on Saturn, a year on Saturn is 29 Earth years. So about every 30 years we 6 00:00:24,950 --> 00:00:27,220 see a great white spot erupted on Saturn. 7 00:00:27,220 --> 00:00:29,380 The great white spot that it erupted in 8 00:00:29,380 --> 00:00:35,140 December 2010. Initially presented itself as a small little white fluffy cloud 9 00:00:35,150 --> 00:00:40,399 that came up. And a various instruments on Cassini were seeing it, and 10 00:00:40,399 --> 00:00:45,620 ground-based instruments seeing it as well. And as the day's progressed the 11 00:00:45,620 --> 00:00:51,080 storm got larger and then it got sheared from the top in the bottom of the storm 12 00:00:51,080 --> 00:00:56,150 on either side of it and it wrapped all the way across the planet over the next 13 00:00:56,150 --> 00:01:00,230 few months. If you were to scale that to a storm system here on the Earth what 14 00:01:00,230 --> 00:01:03,890 you would have is a storm system that covers all of North America but wraps 15 00:01:03,890 --> 00:01:07,880 around the entire planet. There'd be no escaping the storm system if you lived 16 00:01:07,880 --> 00:01:12,380 in North America and it would be lasting for a very long time. This great white 17 00:01:12,380 --> 00:01:17,060 spot happened to occur ten years before we expected it which was very fortunate 18 00:01:17,060 --> 00:01:20,689 because we happen to have a spacecraft called Cassini in orbit around Saturn. 19 00:01:20,689 --> 00:01:25,340 And that spacecraft has a full suite of instrumentation that allows us to study 20 00:01:25,340 --> 00:01:30,200 this great white spot over all wavelength ranges. We never before been 21 00:01:30,200 --> 00:01:35,179 able to study a storm system of this magnitude in the infrared so we are very 22 00:01:35,179 --> 00:01:38,960 fortunate at this time to have a spacecraft in orbit and excellent 23 00:01:38,960 --> 00:01:43,549 ground-based facilities allowing us to make a historical record of this great 24 00:01:43,549 --> 00:01:48,289 white spots. And that will allow us to compare it in future generations when 25 00:01:48,289 --> 00:01:51,310 the next one happens.