Flying over the unlit side of Saturn's rings, the Cassini spacecraft captures Saturn's glow, represented in brilliant shades of electric blue, sapphire and mint green, while the planet's shadow casts a wide net on the rings.
This striking false-color mosaic was created from 25 images taken by Cassini's visual and infrared mapping spectrometer over a period of 13 hours, and captures Saturn in nighttime and daytime conditions. The visual and infrared mapping spectrometer acquires data simultaneously at 352 different wavelengths, or spectral channels. Data at wavelengths of 2.3, 3.0 and 5.1 microns were combined in the blue, green and red channels of a standard color image, respectively, to make this false-color mosaic.
This image was acquired on Feb. 24, 2007, while the spacecraft was 1.58 million kilometres (1 million miles) from the planet and 34.6 degrees above the ring plane. The solar phase angle was 69.5 degrees. In this view, Cassini was looking down on the northern, unlit side of the rings, which are rendered visible by sunlight filtering through from the sunlit, southern face.
On the night side (right side of image), with no sunlight, Saturn's own thermal radiation lights things up. This light at 5.1 microns wavelength (some seven times the longest wavelength visible to the human eye) is generated deep within Saturn, and works its way upward, eventually escaping into space. Thick clouds deep in the atmosphere block that light. An amazing array of dark streaks, spots, and globe-encircling bands is visible instead. Saturn's strong thermal glow at 5.1 microns even allows these deep clouds to be seen on portions of the dayside (left side), especially where overlying hazes are thin and the glint of the sun off of them is minimal. These deep clouds are likely made of ammonium hydrosulphide and cannot be seen in reflected light on the dayside, since the glint of the sun on overlying hazes and ammonia clouds blocks the view of this level.
A pronounced difference in the brightness between the northern and southern hemispheres is apparent. The northern hemisphere is about twice as bright as the southern hemisphere. This is because high-level, fine particles are about half as prevalent in the northern hemisphere as in the south. These particles block Saturn's glow more strongly, making Saturn look brighter in the north.
At 2.3 microns (shown in blue), the icy ring particles are highly reflecting, while methane gas in Saturn's atmosphere strongly absorbs sunlight and renders the planet very dark. At 3.0 microns (shown in green), the situation is reversed: water ice in the rings is strongly absorbing, while the planet's sunlit hemisphere is bright. Thus the rings appear blue in this representation, while the sunlit side of Saturn is greenish-yellow in color. Within the rings, the most opaque parts appear dark, while the more translucent regions are brighter. In particular, the opaque, normally-bright B ring appears here as a broad, dark band separating the brighter A (outer) and C (inner) rings
At 5.1 microns (shown in red), reflected sunlight is weak and thus light from the planet is dominated by thermal (i.e., heat) radiation that wells up from the planet's deep atmosphere. This thermal emission dominates Saturn's dark side as well as the north polar region (where the hexagon is again visible) and the shadow cast by the A and B rings. Variable amounts of clouds in the planet's upper atmosphere block the thermal radiation, leading to a speckled and banded appearance, which is ever-shifting due to the planet's strong winds.
The Cassini-Huygens mission is a cooperative project of NASA, the European Space Agency and the Italian Space Agency. The Jet Propulsion Laboratory, a division of the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, manages the mission for NASA's Science Mission Directorate, Washington, D.C. The Cassini obiter was designed, developed and assembled at JPL. The Visual and Infrared Mapping Spectrometer team is based at the University of Arizona, where this image was produced.
Credit: NASA/JPL/University of Arizona
Source: NASA
Neon Saturn
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Blogger templates
Popular Posts
-
These Hubble Space Telescope images of Vesta and Ceres show two of the most massive asteroids in the asteroid belt, a region between Mars a...
-
This infrared image from NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope shows the Rosette nebula, a pretty star-forming region more than 5,000 light-ye...
-
Bright mid-latitude clouds near the bottom of this view hint at the ongoing cycling of methane on Titan. These cloud streaks are near the s...
-
This image composite highlights the pillars of the Eagle nebula, as seen in infrared light by NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope (bottom) a...
-
NASA has selected proposals, including two from the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., for future lunar science activities. In ...
-
A team of European scientists has proved within an ESA study that the weird quantum effect called 'entanglement' remains intact ove...
-
The Seven Sisters, also known as the Pleiades star cluster, seem to float on a bed of feathers in a new infrared image from NASA's Spit...
-
At today's Launch Readiness News Conference, the Mission Management Team announced that they were in agreement that Space Shuttle Atlan...
-
In this photograph can be seen lunar craters on the moon, and seas of the moon, the darker and flat areas of the Moon. The seas of the moon ...
-
The MESSENGER spacecraft snapped a series of images as it approached Venus on June 5. The planet is enshrouded by a global layer of clouds ...
Labels
- 117 (1)
- asteroids (1)
- Atlantis (3)
- atmosphere (1)
- cassini (5)
- ceres (1)
- Climate (1)
- cluster (1)
- creation (1)
- Dawn (1)
- eagle (1)
- Earth (1)
- enceladus (2)
- ESA (2)
- exploration (1)
- galaxies (1)
- gliese 581 (1)
- HiRISE (1)
- hubble (1)
- iss (2)
- mars (2)
- messenger (2)
- mission (2)
- moon (2)
- NASA (12)
- nebula (2)
- opportunity (1)
- photos (3)
- pictures (1)
- pillars (1)
- planet (1)
- pleiades (1)
- rosset (1)
- saturn (4)
- space (1)
- spitzer (3)
- star (1)
- STS (3)
- telescope (1)
- Titan (5)
- venus (2)
- vesta (1)
Powered by Blogger.
tags
- 117 (1)
- asteroids (1)
- Atlantis (3)
- atmosphere (1)
- cassini (5)
- ceres (1)
- Climate (1)
- cluster (1)
- creation (1)
- Dawn (1)
- eagle (1)
- Earth (1)
- enceladus (2)
- ESA (2)
- exploration (1)
- galaxies (1)
- gliese 581 (1)
- HiRISE (1)
- hubble (1)
- iss (2)
- mars (2)
- messenger (2)
- mission (2)
- moon (2)
- NASA (12)
- nebula (2)
- opportunity (1)
- photos (3)
- pictures (1)
- pillars (1)
- planet (1)
- pleiades (1)
- rosset (1)
- saturn (4)
- space (1)
- spitzer (3)
- star (1)
- STS (3)
- telescope (1)
- Titan (5)
- venus (2)
- vesta (1)
Blog Archive
-
▼
2007
(26)
-
▼
June
(26)
- Hubble Images of Asteroids Vesta and Ceres
- Weather Without Water
- New Science on the Moon
- Messenger Flies By Venus
- Crews to Fold Arrays, Prep for Spacewalk Repair Tasks
- ESA takes steps toward quantum communications
- Enceladus
- Boring Star May Mean Livelier Planet
- STS-117 Crew Inspected Shuttle Heat Shield
- Mars photos by HiRISE
- New View of Titan III
- New View of Titan II
- Titan
- NASA Updates Shuttle Target Launch Date for Hubble...
- STS 117 Mission
- MESSENGER spacecraft approaches the brightly illum...
- Pillars of Creation
- Pleiades Cluster
- Rosset nebula
- Wind Streaks Landscape and Boosts Rover Power Levels
- M81 Galaxy is Pretty in Pink
- New view of Titan
- Enceladus
- Neon Saturn
- Spitzer Nets Thousands of Galaxies in a Giant Cluster
- Research Finds That Earth's Climate is Approaching...
-
▼
June
(26)
0 comments:
Post a Comment