The secret has been hiding in plain view for 40 years. But it took the insight of a veteran astronomer to pull it all together within a year, using observations of Saturn from NASA's Hubble Space Telescope and retired Cassini probe, in addition to the Voyager 1 and 2 spacecraft and the retired International Ultraviolet Explorer mission.
The discovery: Saturn's vast ring system
is heating the giant planet's upper atmosphere. The phenomenon has never before
been seen in the solar system. It's an unexpected interaction between Saturn
and its rings that potentially could provide a tool for predicting if planets
around other stars have glorious Saturn-like ring systems, too.
This composite image shows the Saturn Lyman-alpha bulge, an emission from hydrogen which is a persistent and unexpected excess detected by three distinct NASA missions, namely Voyager 1, Cassini, and the Hubble Space Telescope between 1980 and 2017. A Hubble near-ultraviolet image, obtained in 2017 during the Saturn summer in the northern hemisphere, is used as a reference to sketch the Lyman-alpha emission of the planet. The rings appear much darker than the planet's body because they reflect much less ultraviolet sunlight. Above the rings and the dark equatorial region, the Lyman-alpha bulge appears as an extended (30 degree) latitudinal band that is 30 percent brighter than the surrounding regions. A small fraction of the southern hemisphere appears between the rings and the equatorial region, but it is dimmer than the northern hemisphere. North of the bulge region (upper-right portion of image), the disk brightness declines gradually versus latitude toward the bright aurora region that is here shown for reference (not at scale). A dark spot inside the aurora region represents the footprint of the spin axis of the planet. It's believed that icy rings particles raining on the atmosphere at specific latitudes and seasonal effects cause an atmospheric heating that makes the upper atmosphere hydrogen reflect more Lyman-alpha sunlight in the bulge region. This unexpected interaction between the rings and the upper atmosphere is now investigated in depth to define new diagnostic tools for estimating if distant exoplanets have extended Saturn-like ring systems. Credits: NASA, ESA, Lotfi Ben-Jaffel (IAP & LPL)
The telltale evidence is an excess
of ultraviolet radiation, seen as a spectral line of hot hydrogen in Saturn's
atmosphere. The bump in radiation means that something is contaminating and
heating the upper atmosphere from the outside.
The most feasible explanation is
that icy ring particles raining down onto Saturn's atmosphere cause this
heating. This could be due to the impact of micrometeorites, solar wind
particle bombardment, solar ultraviolet radiation, or electromagnetic forces
picking up electrically charged dust. All this happens under the influence of
Saturn's gravitational field pulling particles into the planet. When NASA's
Cassini probe plunged into Saturn's atmosphere at the end of its mission in
2017, it measured the atmospheric constituents and confirmed that many
particles are falling in from the rings.
"Though the
slow disintegration of the rings is well known, its influence on the atomic
hydrogen of the planet is a surprise. From the Cassini probe, we already knew
about the rings' influence. However, we knew nothing about the atomic hydrogen
content," said Lotfi Ben-Jaffel of the Institute of Astrophysics in Paris
and the Lunar & Planetary Laboratory, University of Arizona, author of a paper
published on March 30 in
the Planetary Science Journal.
"Everything is driven by ring
particles cascading into the atmosphere at specific latitudes. They modify the
upper atmosphere, changing the composition," said Ben-Jaffel. "And
then you also have collisional processes with atmospheric gasses that are
probably heating the atmosphere at a specific altitude."
Ben-Jaffel's conclusion required pulling
together archival ultraviolet-light (UV) observations from four space missions
that studied Saturn. This includes observations from the two NASA Voyager
probes that flew by Saturn in the 1980s and measured the UV excess. At the
time, astronomers dismissed the measurements as noise in the detectors. The
Cassini mission, which arrived at Saturn in 2004, also collected UV data on the
atmosphere (over several years). Additional data came from Hubble and the
International Ultraviolet Explorer, which launched in 1978, and was an
international collaboration between NASA, ESA (European Space Agency), and the
United Kingdom's Science and Engineering Research Council.
But the lingering question was whether all
the data could be illusory, or instead reflected a true phenomenon on Saturn.
The key to assembling the jigsaw puzzle
came in Ben-Jaffel's decision to use measurements from Hubble's Space Telescope
Imaging Spectrograph (STIS). Its precision observations of Saturn were used to
calibrate the archival UV data from all four other space missions that have
observed Saturn. He compared the STIS UV observations of Saturn to the
distribution of light from multiple space missions and instruments.
"When everything was calibrated, we
saw clearly that the spectra are consistent across all the missions. This was
possible because we have the same reference point, from Hubble, on the rate of
transfer of energy from the atmosphere as measured over decades,"
Ben-Jaffel said. "It was really a surprise for me. I just plotted the
different light distribution data together, and then I realized,
wow – it's the same."
Four decades of UV data cover multiple
solar cycles and help astronomers study the Sun's seasonal effects on Saturn.
By bringing all the diverse data together and calibrating it, Ben-Jaffel found
that there is no difference to the level of UV radiation. "At any time, at
any position on the planet, we can follow the UV level of radiation," he
said. This points to the steady "ice rain" from Saturn's rings as the
best explanation.
"We are just at the beginning of this
ring characterization effect on the upper atmosphere of a planet. We eventually
want to have a global approach that would yield a real signature about the
atmospheres on distant worlds. One of the goals of this study is to see how we
can apply it to planets orbiting other stars. Call it the search for
'exo-rings.'"
The Hubble Space Telescope is a project of international cooperation between NASA and ESA. NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, manages the telescope. The Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI) in Baltimore conducts Hubble science operations. STScI is operated for NASA by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy, in Washington, D.C.
Source: Hubble Finds Saturn's Rings Heating Its Atmosphere | NASA
No comments:
Post a Comment