“Saturn is always quaking, but it’s subtle,” Dr. Mankovich said. ...“The planet’s surface moves about a meter every one to two hours like a slowly rippling lake.”
“The fuzzy cores are like a sludge,” Dr. Mankovich said. “The hydrogen and helium gas in the planet gradually mix with more and more ice and rock as you move toward the planet’s center.” “It’s a bit like parts of Earth’s oceans where the saltiness increases as you get to deeper and deeper levels, creating a stable configuration.”
“In order for the planet’s gravitational field to be oscillating with these particular frequencies, the interior must be stable, and that’s only possible if the fraction of ice and rock gradually increases as you go in toward the planet’s center,” Dr. Fuller said.
They also pose challenges to current models of gas giant formation, which hold that rocky cores form first and then attract large envelopes of gas." SciNews
Q: How about this "Model"?----- Through faith we understand that the worlds were framed by the word of God... Hebrews 11:3