Simplest, clearest, most-likely explanation of why there is no impact artefact on Jupiter

Last week something crashed into the great vacuum-cleaner of the solar system, Jupiter – and some guy managed to video it, so we know that it happened.

And the question on planetary-physicists collective minds is: why wasn’t a sodding great mushroom cloud generated?

Compare: Shoemaker-Levy 9 and the 2009 impact

In a Google Wave – which I have no idea whether I can link to – and with almost Adamsian eclat, the sage Gerard Van der Leun explained it to Charlie Martin:

Charles Martin: Jupiter’s Mysterious June 3rd Collision -Why Was There No Visible Impact Cloud?
Gerard Van der Leun: Why? Because Jupiter can suck it up and walk it off, that’s why.

“Because Jupiter can suck it up and walk it off” – too true; and it gives you a perspective of the difference in scale that means that which would seriously hamper life on Earth, is but a modest burp in Jupiter’s atmosphere.

[updated 2155pm to fix error and ambiguous linkage]

Comments

One response to “Simplest, clearest, most-likely explanation of why there is no impact artefact on Jupiter”

  1. Amusingly Anthony Wesley spotted this impact the same day as HST images of his previous Jupiter impact discovery were published. 😉

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