WEBVTT FILE 1 00:00:00.000 --> 00:00:04.720 Music 2 00:00:04.730 --> 00:00:09.030 My name is Brigette Hesman, and I'm a planetary scientist at NASA's Goddard 3 00:00:09.030 --> 00:00:14.040 Space Flight Center and I study storms on Saturn. A Great White Spot is a 4 00:00:14.040 --> 00:00:18.900 massive storm system that erupts on Saturn about once every Saturn year. 5 00:00:18.900 --> 00:00:23.460 The Great White Spot that erupted in December, 2010 first presented itself as 6 00:00:23.460 --> 00:00:27.359 this fluffy white storm cloud that popped up in the northern hemisphere. The 7 00:00:27.359 --> 00:00:31.619 storm when it erupted sent large waves up into the stratosphere and we saw 8 00:00:31.619 --> 00:00:35.579 effects like an increased amount of ethylene, something we never expected to 9 00:00:35.579 --> 00:00:39.870 see. In the coming days, the winds on Saturn sheared the storm in both 10 00:00:39.870 --> 00:00:44.670 directions and it wrapped all the way across the planet. If you were to scale 11 00:00:44.670 --> 00:00:48.690 that to a storm system here on the Earth, what you would have is a storm system 12 00:00:48.690 --> 00:00:52.739 that covers all of North America but wraps around the entire planet. There would be 13 00:00:52.739 --> 00:00:56.460 no escaping this storm system and it would be lasting for a very long time. 14 00:00:56.460 --> 00:01:01.710 This Great White Spot happened to occur ten years before we expected it, which 15 00:01:01.710 --> 00:01:05.430 was very fortunate because we happened to have a spacecraft called Cassini in 16 00:01:05.430 --> 00:01:09.810 orbit around Saturn, and that spacecraft has a full suite of instrumentation that 17 00:01:09.810 --> 00:01:14.250 allows us to study this over all wavelength ranges. Some of the effects 18 00:01:14.250 --> 00:01:18.270 that we got to see in the infrared were these two bright beacons that started to 19 00:01:18.270 --> 00:01:23.009 shine right after the storm erupted in December. Those beacons at first showed 20 00:01:23.009 --> 00:01:28.650 temperature differences of about 20 Kelvin, which is reasonable for a storm. 21 00:01:28.650 --> 00:01:33.540 However, as time progressed we started to see even larger temperature changes. By 22 00:01:33.540 --> 00:01:38.220 May 2011 the two beacons had merged into one, and we saw a temperature change of 23 00:01:38.220 --> 00:01:42.930 over 80 Kelvin from the quiet conditions before the storm. So that would be like 24 00:01:42.930 --> 00:01:47.130 going from the depths of winter in Fairbanks, Alaska to the height of summer 25 00:01:47.130 --> 00:01:51.540 in the Mojave Desert, all in one storm system. Can you imagine what that would 26 00:01:51.540 --> 00:01:53.670 feel like sitting on your deck? We've never before been able to study a 27 00:01:56.350 --> 00:02:01.030 storm system of this magnitude in the infrared, so we are very fortunate at 28 00:02:01.030 --> 00:02:05.350 this time to have a spacecraft in orbit allowing us to make a historical record 29 00:02:05.350 --> 00:02:07.800 of this Great White Spot. 30 00:02:07.800 --> 00:02:08.820 Music 31 00:02:08.820 --> 00:02:20.380 Beep, Beep, Beep