Saturn has an intense and broad eastward equatorial jet with a complex
three-dimensional structure mixed with time variability. The equatorial region
experiences strong seasonal insolation variations enhanced by ring shadowing
and three of the six known giant planetary-scale storms have developed in it.
These factors make Saturn's equator a natural laboratory to test models of jets
in giant planets. Here we report on a bright equatorial atmospheric feature
imaged in 2015 that moved steadily at a high speed of 450 ms-1 not measured
since 1980-81 with other equatorial clouds moving within an ample range of
velocities. Radiative transfer models show that these motions occur at three
altitude levels within the upper haze and clouds. We find that the peak of the
jet (latitudes 10\degree N to 10\degree S) suffers intense vertical shears
reaching +2.5 ms-1 km-1, two orders of magnitude higher than meridional shears,
and temporal variability above 1 bar altitude level