Astronomers have uncovered a link between Neptune's shifting cloud abundance and the 11-year solar cycle, in which the waxing and waning of the Sun's entangled magnetic fields drives solar activity.
This discovery is based on three decades
of Neptune observations captured by NASA's Hubble Space
Telescope and the W. M. Keck Observatory in Hawaii, as well as data from the Lick Observatory in California.
This sequence of Hubble Space Telescope images chronicles the waxing and waning of the amount of cloud cover on Neptune. This long set of observations shows that the number of clouds grows increasingly following a peak in the solar cycle – where the Sun's level of activity rhythmically rises and falls over an 11-year period. The chemical changes are caused by photochemistry, which happens high in Neptune's upper atmosphere and takes time to form clouds. In 1989, NASA's Voyager 2 spacecraft provided the first close-up images of linear, bright clouds, reminiscent of cirrus clouds on Earth, seen high in Neptune's atmosphere. They form above most of the methane in Neptune's atmosphere and reflect all colors of sunlight, which makes them white. Hubble picks up where the brief Voyager flyby left off by continually keeping an eye on the planet yearly. Credits: NASA, ESA, Erandi Chavez (UC Berkeley), Imke de Pater (UC Berkeley)
The link between Neptune and solar
activity is surprising to planetary scientists because Neptune is our solar
system's farthest major planet and receives sunlight with about 0.1% of the
intensity Earth receives. Yet Neptune's global cloudy weather seems to be
driven by solar activity, and not the planet's four seasons, which each last
approximately 40 years.
At present, the cloud coverage seen
on Neptune is extremely low, with the exception of some clouds hovering over
the giant planet's south pole. A University of California (UC) Berkeley-led
team of astronomers discovered that the abundance of clouds normally seen at
the icy giant's mid-latitudes started to fade in 2019.
"I was surprised by how
quickly clouds disappeared on Neptune," said Imke de Pater, emeritus
professor of astronomy at UC Berkeley and senior author of the study. "We
essentially saw cloud activity drop within a few months," she said.
"Even now, four years later,
the most recent images we took this past June still show the clouds haven't
returned to their former levels," said Erandi Chavez, a graduate student
at the Center for Astrophysics | Harvard-Smithsonian (CfA) in Cambridge,
Massachusetts, who led the study when she was an undergraduate astronomy
student at UC Berkeley. "This is extremely exciting and unexpected,
especially since Neptune's previous period of low cloud activity was not nearly
as dramatic and prolonged."
To monitor the evolution of
Neptune's appearance, Chavez and her team analyzed Keck Observatory images
taken from 2002 to 2022, the Hubble Space Telescope archival observations
beginning in 1994, and data from the Lick Observatory in California from 2018
to 2019.
In recent years, the Keck
observations have been complemented by images taken as part of the Twilight
Zone program and
by Hubble's Outer Planet
Atmospheres Legacy (OPAL) program.
The images reveal an intriguing
pattern between seasonal changes in Neptune’s cloud cover and the solar cycle –
the period when the Sun's magnetic field flips every 11 years as it becomes
more tangled like a ball of yarn. This is evident in the increasing number of
sunspots and increasing solar flare activity. As the cycle progresses, the
Sun’s tempestuous behavior builds to a maximum, until the magnetic field beaks
down and reverses polarity. Then the Sun settles back down to a minimum, only
to start another cycle.
This sequence of Hubble Space Telescope images chronicles the waxing and waning of the amount of cloud cover on Neptune. This nearly-30-year-long set of observations shows that the number of clouds grows increasingly following a peak in the solar cycle – where the Sun's level of activity rhythmically rises and falls over an 11-year period. The Sun's level of ultraviolet radiation is plotted in the vertical axis. The 11-year cycle is plotted along the bottom from 1994 to 2022. The Hubble observations along the top, clearly show a correlation between cloud abundance and solar peak of activity. The chemical changes are caused by photochemistry, which happens high in Neptune's upper atmosphere and takes time to form clouds. Credits: NASA, ESA, LASP, Erandi Chavez (UC Berkeley), Imke de Pater (UC Berkeley)
When it's stormy weather on the
Sun, more intense ultraviolet (UV) radiation floods the solar system. The team
found that two years after the solar cycle's peak, an increasing number of
clouds appear on Neptune. The team further found a positive correlation between
the number of clouds and the ice giant's brightness from the sunlight reflecting
off it.
"These remarkable data give us
the strongest evidence yet that Neptune's cloud cover correlates with the Sun’s
cycle," said de Pater. "Our findings support the theory that the
Sun's UV rays, when strong enough, may be triggering a photochemical reaction
that produces Neptune’s clouds."
Scientists discovered the
connection between the solar cycle and Neptune's cloudy weather pattern by
looking at 2.5 cycles of cloud activity recorded over the 29-year span of
Neptunian observations. During this time, the planet's reflectivity increased
in 2002 then dimmed in 2007. Neptune became bright again in 2015, then darkened
in 2020 to the lowest level ever observed, which is when most of the clouds
went away.
The changes in Neptune's brightness
caused by the Sun appear to go up and down relatively in sync with the coming
and going of clouds on the planet. However there is a two-year time lag between
the peak of the solar cycle and the abundance of clouds seen on Neptune. The
chemical changes are caused by photochemistry, which happens high in Neptune's
upper atmosphere and takes time to form clouds.
"It's fascinating to be able
to use telescopes on Earth to study the climate of a world more than 2.5
billion miles away from us," said Carlos Alvarez, staff astronomer at Keck
Observatory and co-author of the study. "Advances in technology and
observations have enabled us to constrain Neptune's atmospheric models, which
are key to understanding the correlation between the ice giant's climate and
the solar cycle."
However, more work is necessary.
For example, while an increase in UV sunlight could produce more clouds and
haze, it could also darken them, thereby reducing Neptune's overall brightness.
Storms on Neptune rising up from the deep atmosphere affect the cloud cover,
but are not related to photochemically produced clouds, and hence may
complicate correlation studies with the solar cycle. Continued observations of
Neptune are also needed to see how long the current near-absence of clouds will
last.
The research team continues to
track Neptune's cloud activity. "We have seen more clouds in the most
recent Keck images that were taken during the same time NASA's James Webb Space
Telescope observed the planet; these clouds were in particular seen at northern
latitudes and at high altitudes, as expected from the observed increase in the
solar UV flux over the past approximately 2 years," said de Pater.
The combined data from Hubble, the
Webb Space Telescope, Keck Observatory, and the Lick Observatory will enable further
investigations into the physics and chemistry that lead to Neptune's dynamic
appearance, which in turn may help deepen astronomers' understanding not only
of Neptune, but also of exoplanets, since many of the planets beyond
our solar system are thought to have Neptune-like qualities.
The findings are published in the journal Icarus.
Credits: NASA's Goddard Space
Flight Center; Lead Producer: Paul Morris
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: Neptune's Disappearing Clouds Linked to the Solar Cycle | NASA
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