Saturn’s Great White Spot, which occurs about once every 30 Earth years, is a windy, towering cloud of ammonia and water spewing out super jolts of thunder and lightning. The storm is about 10,000 times stronger than those on Earth.
Photo credit: NASA
-
deraknid likes this
-
cubeplanets reblogged this from artkimia
-
cthulhu-hungers likes this
-
classyalexis reblogged this from latimes
-
shadowknight415 likes this
-
huangxing888 likes this
-
antsruletheworld reblogged this from latimes
-
antsruletheworld likes this
-
awwyoures0ugly reblogged this from mangawhovian
-
peoplewilltalksherlock reblogged this from mangawhovian
-
mangawhovian reblogged this from latimes
-
youcantaketheskyfrome reblogged this from latimes
-
joseibiryu reblogged this from latimes
-
drewyking reblogged this from latimes
-
dan28289 reblogged this from latimes
-
hayshus likes this
-
recklessmeansnorules reblogged this from latimes
-
602x1023 reblogged this from latimes
-
biasedtrivia likes this
-
did-not reblogged this from voltae
-
voltae reblogged this from voltae
-
skytonight likes this
-
butyeahandstuff reblogged this from latimes
-
shonetan likes this
-
bibidebabideboo reblogged this from bellebelle
-
bellebelle reblogged this from latimes
-
jakeshrugg reblogged this from armistices
-
armistices reblogged this from latimes
-
wefoundthesea reblogged this from latimes
-
veronica-ag reblogged this from latimes
-
spicetiger reblogged this from latimes
-
lescommunes likes this
-
kings-among-runaways reblogged this from latimes
-
xxreiofsunshinexx reblogged this from latimes
-
palpina likes this
-
dwellerinthelibrary likes this
-
diamond1020 reblogged this from latimes
-
This was featured in #Science
-
latimes posted this