The poles of Jupiter were observed in detail for the first time by the Juno spacecraft in 2016 (Bolton et al., 2017). In contrast with the polar regions of Saturn, which are inhabited by a single polar cyclone (PC) (Baines et al., 2009;Sánchez-Lavega et al., 2006), Jupiter's PCs are surrounded by a ring of stable circumpolar cyclones (CPCs) (Adriani et al., 2018;Orton et al., 2017). There are eight CPCs at the north pole and five at the south (Figure 1), each with a diameter of roughly 5,000 km and velocities reaching 100 ms −1 (Adriani et al., 2020;Grassi et al., 2018). Such cyclones can be generated by moist convection (O'Neill et al., 2015(O'Neill et al., , 2016, where 2D inverse energy cascade in the turbulent polar regions brings the kinetic energy from the convective scale up to the horizontal scale of the cyclones (Moriconi et al., 2020;. These regions are bounded by prograde jets at around latitudes 65°N∖S (Rogers et al., 2017(Rogers et al., , 2022, which may act as a separating barrier. In contrast with the Great Red Spot, which is centered around latitude 20°S and has a shallow depth (less than 500 km, Parisi et al. ( 2021)) relative to the deep surrounding jets (∼3,000 km, Kaspi et al. ( 2018)), the polar cyclones, subject to the Taylor-Proudman theorem (Vallis, 2017) with a vertical axis parallel to the planetary rotation axis and a smaller Rossby number, potentially extend deeper, suggesting a 2D dynamical regime.The beta-drift is a force that results from a dipole of vorticity (usually termed "beta-gyres," Sutyrin and Flierl (1994)) that is induced by an interaction between the tangential velocity of a cyclone and a gradient of potential vorticity (PV) that is present in the background of the cyclone (Chan, 2005;Gavriel & Kaspi, 2021;Rossby, 1948). This force creates a poleward drift on cyclones and an equatorward drift on anticyclones when only the planetary vorticity gradient (β) is considered (Chan, 2005;Franklin et al., 1996;Merlis & Held, 2019). Beta-drift is a known contributor to the poleward motion of Earth's tropical cyclones (Zhao et al., 2009), and was shown in shallow-water (SW) models to result in cyclones merging into a PC in settings characterizing gas-giants such as Jupiter and Saturn (