Saturn’s auroral heartbeat discovered
August 5th, 2010 - 5:18 pm ICT by ANI
Washington, Aug 5 (ANI): Uncovering what could be ‘one of the most perplexing puzzles in planetary science’, researchers at the University of Leicester have discovered that Saturn’s aurora, an ethereal ultraviolet glow which illuminates Saturn’s upper atmosphere near the poles, pulses roughly once per Saturnian day.
The length of a Saturnian day has been under much discussion since it was discovered that the traditional ‘clock’ used to measure the rotation period of Saturn, a gas giant planet with no solid surface for reference, apparently does not keep good time.
Saturn, like all magnetised planets, emits radio waves into space from the polar regions.
These radio emissions pulse with a period near to 11 h, and the timing of the pulses was originally, during the Voyager era, thought to represent the rotation of the planet.
However, over the years the period of the pulsing of the radio emissions has varied, and since the rotation of a planet cannot be easily sped up or slowed down, the hunt for the source of the varying radio period has become one of the most perplexing puzzles in planetary science.
And now, researchers, led by Dr Jonathan Nichols, used images from the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope of Saturn’s auroras obtained between 2005-2009 to show that, not only do the radio emissions pulse, but the auroras beat in tandem with the radio.
“This is an important discovery for two reasons. First, it provides a long-suspected but hitherto missing link between the radio and auroral emissions, and second, it adds a critical tool in diagnosing the cause of Saturn’s irregular heartbeat,” said Nichols.
Auroras, more commonly known as the “northern lights” on Earth, are caused when charged particles in space are funnelled along a planet’s magnetic field into the planet’s upper atmosphere near the poles, whereupon they impact the atmospheric particles and cause them to glow.
This happens when a planet’s magnetic field is stressed by, for example, the buffeting from the stream of particles emitted by the Sun, or when moons such as Enceladus or Io expel material into the near-planet space.
Saturn’s radio waves were long suspected to be emitted by the charged particles as they hurtle toward the poles, but no radio-like pulsing had been observed in Saturn’s aurora, an enigmatic disconnect between the two supposedly-related phenomena.
However, the researchers found that by using the clock of the radio pulsing to organise the auroral data, and stacking the results from all the Hubble Saturn auroral images obtained from 2005-2009 on top of each other, the auroral pulsing finally revealed itself.
“This confirms that the auroras and the radio emissions are indeed physically associated, as suspected. This link is important, since it implies that the pulsing of the radio emissions is being imparted by the processes driving Saturn’s aurora, which in turn can be studied by the NASA/ESA spacecraft Cassini, presently in orbit around Saturn. It thus takes us a significant step toward solving the mystery of the variable radio period,” added Nichols. (ANI)
- Saturn's aurorae results in movie featuring both of the planet's poles - Feb 13, 2010
- Cassini craft gets first snapshots from within Saturn's radio aurora - Sep 25, 2010
- New clues may help solve Saturn's rotation mystery - Sep 10, 2009
- Observing flares of ultraviolet light from Jupiter's aurora - Feb 10, 2011
- Cassini captures 'ghostly dance' of Saturn's northern lights - Nov 25, 2009
- NASA reveals Saturn is on a cosmic dimmer switch - Nov 11, 2010
- NASAs Cassini probe discovers mysterious new aurora on Saturn - Nov 13, 2008
- Electrical current between Saturn and its moon discovered - Apr 21, 2011
- Trigger that sets off pulsating aurorae found - Oct 02, 2010
- Man-made aurora could help in predicting space weather - Jun 08, 2010
- Intense solar activity in 2012 will trip mobile phones, GPS - Dec 12, 2010
- Experts predict onset of new cycle of solar-terrestrial activity - Aug 14, 2010
- Ganymede's magnetosphere cause auroral bright spots on Jupiter - Sep 17, 2009
- Scientists create 'artificial ionosphere' using radio waves - Oct 04, 2009
- Venus has an ozone layer too - Oct 10, 2011
Tags: atmospheric particles, auroral emissions, critical tool, dr jonathan, gas giant planet, hubble space telescope, irregular heartbeat, jonathan nichols, magnetic field, missing link, perplexing puzzles, planetary science, radio emissions, radio waves, rotation period, science researchers, solid surface, ultraviolet glow, university of leicester, upper atmosphere