Close Menu

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest news information from worldwide businesses.

    What's Hot

    BYD eyes Stellantis EU plant as EV sales surge, others too

    May 13, 2026

    This daily habit could lower dementia risk by 35%, scientists say

    May 13, 2026

    Blood tests taken years earlier linked to pregnancy risk, reveals research

    May 13, 2026
    Facebook Instagram YouTube LinkedIn X (Twitter)
    Trending
    • BYD eyes Stellantis EU plant as EV sales surge, others too
    • This daily habit could lower dementia risk by 35%, scientists say
    • Blood tests taken years earlier linked to pregnancy risk, reveals research
    • Physical AI Conference Comes to San Jose as Robotics & Autonomous AI Go Mainstream 
    • AI finds a hidden stress signal inside routine CT scans
    • MSP hike for Kharif crops: Cabinet raises support prices for 14 crops for marketing season 2026-27 – The Economic Times Video
    • French hantavirus patient is critically ill, on artificial lung as total cases grow to 11
    • How both differ from Covid-19
    Newspublicly
    • About Us
    • Advertise & Partner with us
    • Pitch Your Story
    • Contact Us
    Facebook Instagram LinkedIn X (Twitter)
    Subscribe
    • Home
    • World News
      • Asia
      • India
      • USA
      • UK & Europe
      • Middle East
    • Economy & Business
      • Global Economy
      • Corporate & Industry
      • Finance & Markets
      • Policy & Trade
    • Technology
      • Gadgets & Devices
      • Software & Apps
      • AI & Machine Learning
      • Robotics & Automation
    • Health & Medicine
      • Fitness & Nutrition
      • Research & Innovation
      • Disease & Treatment
      • Doctors, Clinics & Patient Care
    • Travel & Tourism
    • Automobile
      • Electric & Hybrid Vehicles
      • Auto Industry Insights
    • Sports
    • More
      • Education
      • Real Estate
      • Environment & Climate
      • Space & Astronomy
      • War & Conflicts
    Newspublicly
    Home»More»Space & Astronomy»30-mile-high clouds of acid on Venus are made by the largest ‘hydraulic jump’ in the solar system
    Space & Astronomy

    30-mile-high clouds of acid on Venus are made by the largest ‘hydraulic jump’ in the solar system

    Divya SharmaBy Divya SharmaMay 13, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read0 Views
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Copy Link WhatsApp


    A monstrous bank of cloud 3,700 miles (6,000 kilometers) long that sweeps around Venus every few days is being generated by rising sulfuric acid vapor pushed high into the atmosphere by what is essentially the same phenomenon that describes how water from a running tap spreads out in the basin of your kitchen sink.

    In 2016, the Japanese Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA)’s Akatsuki mission to Venus discovered the bank of clouds some 31 miles (50 km) up in Venus’ dense Venus’ dense atmosphere. The weather system is aligned with the planet’s equator, but scientists have been unable to explain its immense size, velocity and its noticeably sharp leading edge.

    The mystery has, however, only lasted ten years. By creating mathematical models that describe the dynamical flow of gas and how pockets of gas rise, an international team of astronomers has now worked out the source of this huge atmospheric phenomenon. The answer is something called a “hydraulic jump,” which occurs when a gas or fluid that is shallow but fast moving suddenly slows while becoming deeper. An everyday example is water flowing out from a tap into the basin of your kitchen sink; where it strikes the bottom of the basin, it is initially shallow but fast moving, but as the water spreads out it rapidly becomes deep and slower.


    You may like

    A similar thing happens in Venus’s atmosphere, which is made almost entirely of carbon dioxide along with a small amount of nitrogen and trace amounts of other gases including sulfur dioxide, which can form clouds. Not too high above Venus’s scorched surface there propagates an eastward-moving atmospheric wave. It’s a planetary wave, meaning that it spans thousands of kilometers and is focused on the planet’s equatorial region. (Venus itself has a diameter of 7,520 miles/ 12,104 kilometers, so a 3,700-mile/6,000-kilometer-wide wave is quite significant.)

    On Earth we would call such a wave a ‘Kelvin wave’, and they can occur in the ocean as well as the atmosphere. Of course, with a surface temperature in excess of 860 degrees Fahrenheit (460 degrees Celsius), Venus has no oceans and its Kelvin wave is purely in its atmosphere.

    When Venus’s Kelvin wave slows, it instigates a hydraulic jump, and this allows a powerful updraft of sulfuric acid vapor to rise up to an altitude of about 31 miles (50 kilometers), where it condenses into a bank of sulfuric acid clouds of scarily enormous proportions. These clouds then start to trail behind the Kelvin wave that marks the leading edge of the cloud bank.

    “We’re now able to show that this cloud disruption is caused by the largest known hydraulic jump in the solar system,” said study leader Takeshi Imamura, from the University of Tokyo, in a statement. “Our discovery of the hydraulic jump on Venus connecting a very large-scale horizontal process with a strong localized vertical wave is unexpected, as in fluid dynamics these are usually disconnected.”

    Space

    water pours into a metal basin, creating a shallow ring in a deep pool

    A common example of a hydraulic jump created when water flows from a tap into a basin; where the water strikes the bottom of the basin, it is initially shallow but fast moving, but as the water spreads out it rapidly becomes deep and slower. (Image credit: James Kilfiger/Wikimedia Commons/CC BY-SA 3.0)

    The discovery is the first time that a hydraulic jump has been found on a planet beyond Earth. So the fact that Venus’s hydraulic jump behaves in unexpected ways should perhaps not be too surprising, and is a reminder that atmospheric phenomena on other planets can vary wildly from what we experience on our planet.

    And Venus’s atmosphere is very different to Earth’s — rich in carbon dioxide, so oppressive as to create a crushing surface pressure of 92 bar and super-rotating around Venus, so that its atmosphere rotates around the planet in just four Earth days whereas the solid body of Venus takes 243 days to complete one rotation.

    The discovery also plugs a gap in our understanding of Venus’s dense atmosphere.

    “Up until now, we used a global circulation model for Venus that is similar to Earth’s, but this model doesn’t include the hydraulic jump that we have now identified,” said Imamura. “Our next step will be to test this discovery with a more inclusive climate model that includes other atmospheric processes. We will face some challenges due to the huge amount of processing power required to run such simulations. Even with modern supercomputers, it isn’t easy.”

    The findings of Imamura’s team were published on April 24 in the Journal of Geophysical Research — Planets.



    Source link

    Divya Sharma
    • Website

    Divya Sharma is a content writer at NewsPublicly.com, creating SEO-focused articles on travel, lifestyle, and digital trends.

    Related Posts

    The Whirlpool Galaxy comes alive photo of the day for May 13, 2026

    May 13, 2026

    ‘Like putting a microscope into the core of the sun’: World’s 1st space-based neutrino detector launches to orbit

    May 13, 2026

    Cost estimate for ‘Golden Dome’ missile defense system balloons to $1.2 trillion

    May 13, 2026
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Demo
    Top Posts

    “Inside Gemini Robotics 1.5: How Robots Learn to Reason & Act

    November 22, 202524 Views

    How US Tariffs Are Reshaping the Global Growth Landscape?

    November 21, 202518 Views

    Pakistani Journalist Laughing at Tejas Fighter Jet Crash at Dubai Airshow Sparks Massive Outrage Worldwide

    November 23, 202517 Views

    Vibe-Coding Boom: How Non-Coders Build Apps With AI Agents

    November 22, 202515 Views
    Don't Miss

    BYD eyes Stellantis EU plant as EV sales surge, others too

    May 13, 20263 Mins Read0 Views

    BYD wants to take over underutilized plants in Europe from legacy automakers to fuel its…

    This daily habit could lower dementia risk by 35%, scientists say

    May 13, 2026

    Blood tests taken years earlier linked to pregnancy risk, reveals research

    May 13, 2026

    Physical AI Conference Comes to San Jose as Robotics & Autonomous AI Go Mainstream 

    May 13, 2026
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • LinkedIn
    • WhatsApp

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from SmartMag about art & design.

    Demo
    NEWSPUBLICLY
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram LinkedIn

    Home

    • About Us
    • Leadership
    • Advertise & Partner With Us
    • Pitch Your Story
    • Media Kit & Pricing
    • Career
    • FAQs

    Guidelines

    • Editorial & Submission
    • Partnership
    • Advertising & Sponsor
    • Intellectual Property Policy
    • Community & Comment
    • Security & Data Protection
    • Send Your Opinion

    Quick Links

    • Cookie Policy
    • Payment & Billing Terms
    • Refund & Cancellation
    • Copyright Policy
    • Complaint & Support
    • Sitemap
    • Contact Us

    Subscribe Us

    Get the latest news and updates!

    Copyright © 2026 Newspublicly (DIGITALIX COMMUNICATION). All Rights Reserved.
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Use
    • Disclaimer