Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submitlogin
Jupiter Is a Garden of Storms (nautil.us)
60 points by dnetesn on March 28, 2015 | hide | past | favorite | 10 comments


"It's always a mistake to read - you learn too many things."

That sentence is probably the most awesome thing I've read all day.

Also, who doesn't like Jupiter? Given the vast, vast scale of the universe, it's kind of funny - and mind-bending - how much there is still to learn about our own solar system.

EDIT: Also, the phrase "Garden of storms" is beautiful!


>Also, the phrase "Garden of storms" is beautiful!

...and it reminded me of Gogh and Starry Night. The color palette is different but Jupiter's storms and starry night are very evocative of each other.


Thanks for sharing. Reading this made me think about Jupiter as a ball of fluid in a way I hadn't previously. Now I'm wondering why all of Jupiter's colors haven't mixed together.


The different gasses have different densities, as well as different colors!


Sorry if this is a silly question, but does that mean that they don't mix well (like oil and water)?


It's not as extreme as oil and water, no. But it's correct that they don't mix as well. Especially if you consider volumes the size of jupiter. A layer of hydrogen gas (h2) will weigh less than a layer of oxygen(o2), so if they're at the same temperature then they will separate over time.


So .. who will be NASA's next Carl Sagan? Anyone got any ideas?


Neil deGrasse Tyson and Brian Cox (not NASA, of course) have been doing a great job, and things will only get better, with more discoveries, and better ways of communicating those discoveries.


I take you missed the "Cosmos, a time-space odyssey" series last year?


I'm not aware of anyone who can replace him perfectly. There are a set of people who overlap a bit and remind me of Sagan in different ways. Neil DG Tyson. Bill Nye. Richard Dawkins. Elon Musk.




Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: