http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5hlYczu9oUa7pIrB-wzL3v
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(AFP) - 7 hours ago

PARIS - A tempest that erupted on Saturn in January has become the Solar
System's longest continuously observed lightning storm, astronomers
reported on Tuesday.

The storm broke out in "Storm Alley," a region 35 degrees south of the
ringed giant's equator, researchers told the European Planetary Science
Congress in Potsdam, near Berlin.

Thunderstorms there can be as big as 3,000 kilometers (nearly 2,000
miles) across.

The powerful event was spotted by the US space probe Cassini, using an
instrument that can detect radiowaves emitted by lightning discharge.

"The reason why we see lightning in this peculiar location is not
completely clear," said Georg Fischer of the Austrian Academy of
Sciences in a press release.

"It could be that this latitude is one of the few places in Saturn's
atmospher that allow large-scale vertical convection of water clouds,
which is necessary for thunderstorms to develop."

But another possibility for the southerly location of "Storm Alley"
could be seasonal, said Fischer.

In 1980 and 1981, the Voyager spacecraft flew by Saturn and observed
lightning storms near the equator.

It could be that the mega-storms will now shift back to equatorial
latitudes as Saturn continues its crawl around the Sun. A "year" in
Saturn is equivalent to more than 29 Earth years.

The previous record-breaker for a Solar System thunderstorm was an event
that lasted seven and a half months, running from November 2007 to July
2008, also spotted by Cassini.
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