In the outer reaches of our solar system, gas giants are renowned for their violent, complex, and persistent atmospheric activity. Jupiter's Great Red Spot is an anticyclonic storm that has persisted for at least three hundred years, large enough to engulf several Earths. Neptune's Great Dark Spot, on the other hand, is a cyclonic storm similar in size to Earth's hurricanes but far larger, surrounded by bright high-altitude clouds. The formation and maintenance of these storms are closely related to the planets' rapid rotation, the energy released from their internal heat sources, and their unique atmospheric compositions (such as ammonia ice on Jupiter and methane on Neptune). They serve as natural laboratories for studying planetary atmospheric dynamics, energy transfer, and long-term climate evolution. Our interactive exhibit, "Jupiter-Neptune Storms," brings the magnificent spectacle of these two distant planets to life on a 1500*800*1100mm double-sphere comparison platform. At