Its a storm
Yes, The Great Red Spot is a Hurricane, but it doesn't have rain. The Great Red Has lightning and very, very fast winds, but no air. It is still moving across Jupiters southern hemisphere today and has been doing it for 350 years.
Jupiter's Great Red Spot is a massive storm located in the planet's southern hemisphere, characterized by its reddish color and enormous size, measuring about 1.3 times the diameter of Earth. This anticyclonic storm has been raging for at least 350 years, possibly much longer, and is sustained by the planet's dynamic atmosphere and heat from its interior. The Great Red Spot is one of the most recognizable features of Jupiter and serves as a fascinating subject of study in planetary meteorology.
The Great Red Spot is actually a storm on Jupiter, not Saturn. It is a persistent anticyclonic storm located in the southern hemisphere of Jupiter and is one of the largest and longest-lived storms in our solar system.
one of jupiters features are that it surface is mostly made of hydrogen and helium
The Jupiter is BIG RED SPOT and a storm system
Entire southern hemisphere.
The Great Dark Spot on Neptune is a massive storm system in the planet's atmosphere. It is similar to Jupiter's Great Red Spot but appears as a dark, swirling storm in the southern hemisphere of Neptune. The size and frequency of such storms on Neptune make it a dynamic and interesting planet to study.
Depends on where you are. If you're in the Northern Hemisphere, it's going to be the Big Dipper or Ursa Major (that's the same constellation). In the Southern Hemisphere, it's the Southern Cross.
None. Saturn has a great white spot, Uranus has a dark spot. However, Neptune has a great dark spot [see related link for a picture] which has been compared to Jupiters great red spot, but it is not red.
The Great Red Spot is a great anti-cyclonic (high pressure) storm akin to a hurricane on Earth, but it is enormous (three Earths would fit within its boundaries) and it has persisted for at least the 400 years that humans have observed it through telescopes. Since it is anti-cyclonic in Jupiter's Southern hemisphere, the rotation is counterclockwise, with a period of about 6 days. (A hurricane in Earth's Southern hemisphere rotates clockwise because it is a low pressure system.) The clouds associated with the Spot appear to be about 8 km above neighboring cloud tops.
it rotates in a counterclockwise direction....
Voyager 1 and 2 in 1979