Interpretation of the Radio Rotation Period of Jupiter in Terms of the Cyclotron Theory
PM McCulloch
Australian Journal of Physics
21(3) 409 - 414
Published: 1968
Abstract
Since 1961 the most intense source of Jovian decametric emission has drifted with respect to system III longitude by about + 100 per year (Douglas and Smith 1963; Smith et al. 1965). Interpreted as a change in the rotation rate, this would imply that the period increased by approximately 1·1 sec around 1960. Runcorn (1967) and Hide (1967) have interpreted this as a change in the rotation rate of the solid body of Jupiter, in which angular momentum is exchanged between Jupiter's core and the Great Red Spot.https://doi.org/10.1071/PH680409
© CSIRO 1968