Jupiter's Red Spot--Time to consider an alternate explanation.

Normally, this would go under my blog "thoughts and ideas" but I've already posted there about this. Time to add some evidence.

In the latest edition of Discover Magazine (April 2015), there is an image of Jupiter's South Pole. The photo provides what I think is very strong evidence for my contention that the Big Red Spot is not a "raging storm" active for centuries but, rather, a solid body floating on the surface. In the photo, you clearly see that on one side of the "spot" are smooth lines and on the opposite side are eddies of turbulence. In an Earth storm, any gaseous matter in its path gets taken up by the storm--there are no eddies left behind in its path.

I don't have access to data to be able to say whether the spot is plowing through Jupiter's atmosphere (orbiting, if you will) or if it is relatively stationary and the atmosphere is sweeping past it. Also, I don't recall the moving images that well but if there are any spirals showing up around the spot, they are due to rotation of the probably irregularly-shaped body--likewise for changes in diameter of the spot over time.

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