Saturn atmospheric dynamics one year after Cassini: Long-lived features and time variations in the drift of the Hexagon
R. Hueso, A. S\'anchez-Lavega, J.F. Rojas, A.A. Simon, T. Barry, T., del R\'io-Gaztelurrutia, A. Antu\~nano, K.M. Sayanagi, M. Delcroix, L.N., Fletcher, E. Garc\'ia-Melendo, S. P\'erez-Hoyos, J. Blalock, F. Colas, J. M., G\'omez-Forrellad, J.L. Gunnarson, D. Peach, M.H. Wong

TL;DR
This study analyzes Saturn's atmospheric features over several years, revealing long-lived cloud systems, vortex dynamics, and long-term variations in the Hexagon's drift rate, combining data from Cassini, HST, Voyager, and ground-based observations.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive multi-year analysis of Saturn's atmospheric features, highlighting long-term stability and drift variations of key structures using diverse observational data.
Findings
Long-lived cloud features tracked over a decade.
Drift rate variations of the Hexagon linked to polar spot activity.
Significant changes in vortex properties over years.
Abstract
We examine Saturn's atmosphere with observations from ground-based telescopes and Hubble Space Telescope (HST). We present a detailed analysis of observations acquired during 2018. A system of polar storms that appeared in the planet in March 2018 and remained active with a complex phenomenology at least until Sept. is analyzed elsewhere (Sanchez-Lavega et al., in press , 2019). Many of the cloud features in 2018 are long-lived and can be identified in images in 2017, and in some cases, for up to a decade using also Cassini ISS images. Without considering the polar storms, the most interesting long-lived cloud systems are: i) A bright spot in the EZ that can be tracked continuously since 2014 with a zonal velocity of 444 m/s in 2014 and 452 m/s in 2018. This velocity is different from the zonal winds at the cloud level at its latitude during the Cassini mission, and is closer to zonal…
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