NASA’s Hubble Catches Images Of Saturn’s Rings Breaking & Heating The Atmosphere
By Nicole Rodirgues, 31 Mar 2023
NASA’s Hubble telescope has captured many great images in its time. Just recently, it took shots of a jellyfish galaxy ebbing its way through the universe. This time, it has caught Saturn’s rings performing a never-before-seen phenomenon.
The phenomenon in question is that its astounding orbital system is possibly heating the planet’s atmosphere. Saturn’s rings comprise billions of chunks of ice and rock from asteroids destroyed by its gravity.
The image sent back by Hubble showed a dark blue area that indicated higher temperatures. The space exploration team classifies this as an excess of ultraviolet radiation and a spectral line of hot hydrogen. Scientists hypothesize that it showed as such in the picture because the icy particles in its system are raining down and heating the atmosphere.
“This could be due to the impact of micrometeorites, solar wind particle bombardment, solar ultraviolet radiation, or electromagnetic forces picking up electrically charged dust,” said NASA.
Tiny bits of Saturn’s rings are falling into the massive planet, causing its upper atmosphere to heat up. The discovery was made using 40 years of data from several @NASASolarSystem missions, including @NASAHubble: https://t.co/GXIGnIFMoL pic.twitter.com/CHqxFyE0g1
— NASA (@NASA) March 30, 2023
The conclusion to the study was aided by research pulled from four different missions which studied Saturn for over 40 years. “When everything was calibrated, we saw clearly that the spectra were consistent across all the missions. This was possible because we have the same reference point, from Hubble, on the rate of energy transfer from the atmosphere as measured over decades,” said Lofit Ben-Jaffel, the author of the study, published in the Planetary Science Journal.
The consistent findings show that such “ice rain” has been a constant on the planet.
[via TechTimes and New Scientists, images via various sources]