Jupiter's third largest and longest-lived oval: Color changes and dynamics
N. Barrado-Izagirre, J. Legarreta, A. S\'anchez-Lavega, S., P\'erez-Hoyos, R. Hueso, P. I\~nurrigarro, J. F. Rojas, I. Mendikoa, I., Ordo\~nez-Etxeberria, the IOPW Team

TL;DR
This paper documents the long-term evolution, color changes, and dynamics of Jupiter's third-largest and longest-lived oval, using multi-instrument observations to analyze its stability, structure, and interactions over more than a decade.
Contribution
It provides a detailed historical and observational analysis of a persistent Jovian oval, revealing its stability and dynamic interactions despite environmental disturbances.
Findings
The oval has remained morphologically stable since 2017.
It is higher and redder than its surroundings but has lower cloud tops than other large ovals.
The oval's main characteristics are stable over years despite environmental changes.
Abstract
The transition region between the North Equatorial Band (NEBn) and North Tropical Zone (NTrZ) in Jupiter is home to convective storms, systems of cyclones and anticyclones and atmospheric waves. A large anticyclone formed in the year 2006 at planetographic latitude 19N and persists since then after a complex dynamic history, being possibly the third longest-lived oval in the planet after Jupiter's Great Red Spot and oval BA. This anticyclone has experienced close interactions with other ovals, merging with another oval in February 2013; it has also experienced color changes, from white to red (September 2013). The oval survived the effects of the closely located North Temperate Belt Disturbance, which occurred in October 2016 and fully covered the oval, rendering it unobservable for a short time. When it became visible again at its expected longitude from its previous longitudinal…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Planetary Science and Exploration · Isotope Analysis in Ecology
