Great Dark Spot lake-ye siyâh-e bozorg Fr.: Grande tache noire One of a series of dark spots on → Neptune
similar in appearance to
Jupiter’s → Great Red Spot.
It was discovered in 1989 by NASA’s Voyager 2 space probe.
Also known as GDS-89.
The dark, oval spot had initial dimensions of
13,000 × 6,600 km, about the same size as
Earth.
Although
it appears similar to Jupiter’s spot, which is an
→ anticyclonic storm, it is believed that the Great
Dark Spot is an atmospheric hole similar to the hole in Earth’s
→ ozone layer
ozone layer. Moreover,
unlike Jupiter’s spot, which has lasted for hundreds of years,
the lifetimes of Great Dark Spots
appear to be much shorter, forming and disappearing
once every few years or so. Based on pictures taken by Voyager and
since then with the → Hubble Space Telescope,
Neptune appears to
spend somewhat more than half its
time with a Great Dark Spot. |