No it is caused bya dust storm it is NOT a volcano
The large hurricane on Jupiter is called the Great Red Spot. It is an enormous anticyclonic storm system that has been observed for over 300 years. This massive storm is larger than Earth and is characterized by its deep red coloration.
A hot spot volcano is a volcano that forms over a persistent source of magma known as a hot spot, which is usually located beneath the Earth's crust. These volcanoes are often isolated and can produce large volumes of basaltic lava. Examples include the Hawaiian Islands and Yellowstone National Park in the United States.
The Great Red Spot on Jupiter is large enough to fit approximately three Earths inside it. This storm feature is a massive, high-pressure anticyclonic storm that has been raging for centuries on Jupiter's surface.
No. Kilauea is associated with a hot spot.
Yes, Kilauea volcano in Hawaii is considered a hot spot volcano. This means it is formed by a mantle plume beneath the Earth's crust, creating a source of heat and molten rock that erupts to the surface.
Voyager 1 and 2 in 1979
The large hurricane on Jupiter is called the Great Red Spot. It is an enormous anticyclonic storm system that has been observed for over 300 years. This massive storm is larger than Earth and is characterized by its deep red coloration.
A hot spot volcano is a volcano that forms over a persistent source of magma known as a hot spot, which is usually located beneath the Earth's crust. These volcanoes are often isolated and can produce large volumes of basaltic lava. Examples include the Hawaiian Islands and Yellowstone National Park in the United States.
About 300 years (109,500 days)
A shield volcano
It depends where you're looking from. I think its on the bottom left corner.
The Great Red Spot on Jupiter is large enough to fit approximately three Earths inside it. This storm feature is a massive, high-pressure anticyclonic storm that has been raging for centuries on Jupiter's surface.
Vesuvius is a explosive subduction volcano, not a hot spot volcano.
Jupiter's giant red spot is really just a giant storm and is sometimes nicknamed Jupiter's Red eye.
No. Kilauea is associated with a hot spot.
Yes, Kilauea volcano in Hawaii is considered a hot spot volcano. This means it is formed by a mantle plume beneath the Earth's crust, creating a source of heat and molten rock that erupts to the surface.
Kilauea