Even at Neptune's incredible distance from the sun,Rajni Bhabhi 2.0 (2023) Hindi Short Film astronomers have long suspected it has auroras, though they had never seen them until now.
The James Webb Space Telescope, a collaboration of NASAand its Canadian and European spaceagency counterparts, has finally captured clear images of these magnificent Neptunian light shows.
"As a long-time Neptunophile, anticipation of these images was one of the key reasons I became a JWST Interdisciplinary Scientist," said Heidi Hammel, a Neptune expert, in a poston X. "Kudos to the team for realizing my dream!"
But Webb's observations didn't just provide new pretty pictures of the ice giant planet's greenish-blue splotches. It revealed how odd Neptune's auroras are compared to other planets', glowing over its midriff rather than its poles. The new research was published in Nature Astronomy.
SEE ALSO: Webb reveals that's no star over there. It's an entire freaking galaxy.Neptune, at some 3 billion miles from the sun, is a dark, blustery world, whipped by winds faster than the speed of sound. As the most distant planet in the solar system, it only receives a dim twilight's worth of sunshine at its high noon. It takes about 165 years for the ice giant to make one loop around our star, and it's not visible to the naked eye from Earth.
For three decades, scientists have studied how Jupiter, Saturn, and Uranusinteract with space by looking at light emitted from charged molecules in their upper atmospheres. When the sun blasts out radiation, charged particles travel along a planet's invisible magnetic field lines. When these particles strike gases, they heat up and glow. The results are colorful light displays.
On Earth, the colors differ depending on the type of atmospheric gas and its altitude. Oxygen glows red or blue, while nitrogen can create green, blue, or pink. The recent strong solar storm conditions — a byproduct of the sun being at solar maximum — are causing auroras around the North Pole to sprawl, allowing people who live farther south to see them.
Similar to storm seasons on Earth, the sun experiences a weather pattern that repeats every 11 years. At the beginning and end of this cycle, the activity is at its calmest. But solar activity increases, climaxing in the middle of the cycle and causing the sun to roil with giant eruptions.
NASA’s Voyager 2spacecraft found hints of auroras on Neptune in 1989, but scientists couldn’t get a clear picture then. Using Webb’s near-infrared instrument in June 2023, they not only got the shots but also discovered the key molecule found in auroras of the other gas giants, called trihydrogen cation. That detection confirms the same processes are occurring on Neptune.
Webb has filled in many gaps left by Voyager 2, the only spacecraft to visit the planet. In 2022, the telescope captured Neptune's ghostly rings and revealed a band of clouds around a known vortex at the planet's south pole for the first time.
But the Voyager 2 mission did discover the strange nature of Neptune's magnetic field, tilted at a steep angle. Unlike Earth’s steady magnetic field, Neptune’s shifts and twists. Because auroras occur where magnetic fields converge with a planet's atmosphere, Neptune's are far from its poles.
"Neptune's aurora shines over latitudes comparable to South America on Earth," Hammel said. "This is because Neptune's magnetic field is seriously tilted from the planet's rotation axis (by 47 degrees!) and offset from the center of the planet (by half a planetary radius!)."
Voyager 2 also took Neptune's upper atmosphere temperature. Webb scientists were surprised to learn that the planet has cooled over the past 34 years by hundredsof degrees. It's now about half as warm as it was in 1989.
This extreme plunge may have something to do with why Neptune’s auroras have been so hard to detect. Scientists had assumed they would be as bright as those on some other planets, but the colder atmosphere likely made them fainter. The finding also suggests that Neptune's atmosphere changes more frequently than its seasons, which last about 40 years, and perhaps even the solar cycle. This means some other mysterious forces are at play that they'd like to get to the bottom of.
Astronomers plan to use Webb to continue studying Neptune over a full solar cycle. They hope to figure out why Neptune's magnetic field is so tilted and what caused it.
Topics NASA
Previous:Put Me In, Coach!
'Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for November 12, 2023Fitbit Charge 6 deal: Save 38% at AmazonCharles and Ray Eames’ Films Shine a Light on Their Design PhilosophyAuthor's tweet about a disappointing book signing draws support from literary legendsMadame Bovary’s Wedding CakeHoward’s Way: An Oral History of Richard HowardWhen Video Games Were Playable StoriesFun with Textiles: Samantha Bittman’s Woven PaintingsSusan Howe Introduces Her Latest Collection of Poems, “Debths”Starting Out in the EveningWhen do you stop sharing your location with someone?Mother Monster: “Mommie Dearest,” “Book of Mutter,” and Unhappy MomsWhen Your Art’s Just Not Instagrammable EnoughThe Joys and Frustrations of the Clay CourtGo Stand in the Corner (And Notice How Powerful It Is Over There)Walruses Were Once Magical Creatures, Prone to Suddenly Falling AsleepThe Joys and Frustrations of the Clay CourtThe Brain? Still Full of Mystery, After All These MillenniaWhere I Wasn’t When Manchester BledHumanities Majors: the Silicon Valley Cult Wants to Eat Your Brain 8 weird things Indians did in 2016 to get into Guinness World Records Adam Scott roasts Mitch McConnell for using a 'Parks & Rec' GIF San Francisco becomes the first U.S. city to ban Juuls Rory McIlroy had a very blunt response to Tiger Woods' Christmas outfit Microsoft's foldable Surface could support Android apps 'Airbnb Luxe' connects wealthy travelers to extraordinary properties 'Name the film, but wrong answers only' meme is cinematic comedy gold Bryan Cranston and Aaron Paul tweet same photo, send 'Breaking Bad' fans into meltdown 'Yesterday' is low 6 simple 'Harry Potter: Wizards Unite' mistakes to avoid while playing Google Maps can now predict how crowded your train will be Facebook pushes new rules for political advertising worldwide Review: The CocoKool 3 Here's why you don't get paired with that Uber car you see on the map Inside Amazon's Prime Now warehouse the week before Christmas Apple's self Uber got in a fight with California, so it's moving its self 11 terrible beauty trends from 2016 that need to die Fans say Netflix's dub of 'Neon Genesis Evangelion' erases queer subtext YouTube will now let you block recommendations from specific channels
2.1652s , 10158.7578125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Rajni Bhabhi 2.0 (2023) Hindi Short Film】,Openness Information Network