Close Menu
  • Home
  • Holiday Loops
  • Advertise with Us
  • About
    • About & Contact
    • Advertise with Us
    • Legal
    • Vote
  • Good News
  • Get Involved
    • Nominate an Inspirational Person of the Week
    • Submit Your Video, Photo or Story
  • Podcast
  • Support Us
  • Subscribe to Newsletter

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest good news and other great things from STN.

What's Hot

Check Out the Events this Weekend, May 16-18 in the Mahoning Valley

May 16, 2025

Cafaro Foundation Scholarships Awarded to 50 Students

May 14, 2025

Curbstone Coaches #HOF Spotlight: Jim Morrison, Contribution to Sports

May 14, 2025
Facebook Instagram LinkedIn YouTube
Facebook Instagram LinkedIn YouTube
Spanning the Need: Good News, Inspiring, the Uninspired.
Subscribe Login
  • About
    • About & Contact
    • Advertise with Us
    • Legal
    • Holiday Loops
    • Vote
  • Holiday Loops
  • Podcast

    E138: From Nurse to Heart Health Advocate: Jennifer Knight’s Inspiring Journey

    August 13, 2024

    E137: Chef Ottavio Musumeci’s Culinary Journey: Celebrating 38 Years of Passion and Excellence at Station Square

    July 30, 2024

    E136: Educating with Passion and Purpose: Superintendent Tim Saxton’s 36-Year Journey

    July 9, 2024

    E135: Building a Legacy: Dr. Farid Naffah on Medicine, LadyKindness and the Avamar Foundation

    June 18, 2024

    E134: Preserving the Past, Embracing the Future: Mayor Ben Kyle’s Leadership in Hubbard

    May 28, 2024
  • Good News
    1. Education
    2. Community & Activism
    3. Person of the Week
    4. Sports
    5. Travel
    6. View All

    Cafaro Foundation Scholarships Awarded to 50 Students

    May 14, 2025

    POTW: Education Edition: Jerry Turillo, Boardman Local Schools (Teacher Appreciation Week)

    May 8, 2025

    #POTW: Education Edition: Ashley Kermec, Girard City Schools (Teacher Appreciation Week)

    May 7, 2025

    #POTW: Education Edition: Melissa Hackett, Mahoning County Career and Technical Center (Teacher Appreciation Week)

    May 5, 2025

    2025 ATHENA Award Nominees Announced

    May 9, 2025

    84 Lumber Donates $100,000 on ‘Good Morning America’ to Help Rebuild Community

    April 29, 2025

    Girard teen victorious in competition to fight back against heart disease and stroke

    April 25, 2025

    Carrie Malotte named American Heart Association® Go Red for Women’s® Northeast Ohio Woman of Impact Winner

    April 25, 2025

    Curbstone Coaches #HOF Spotlight: Jim Morrison, Contribution to Sports

    May 14, 2025

    POTW: Education Edition: Jerry Turillo, Boardman Local Schools (Teacher Appreciation Week)

    May 8, 2025

    #POTW: Education Edition: Ashley Kermec, Girard City Schools (Teacher Appreciation Week)

    May 7, 2025

    #POTW: Education Edition: Melissa Hackett, Mahoning County Career and Technical Center (Teacher Appreciation Week)

    May 5, 2025

    Curbstone Coaches #HOF Spotlight: Jim Morrison, Contribution to Sports

    May 14, 2025

    Curbstone Coaches #HOF Spotlight: Steve Leslie, Contribution to Sports

    April 30, 2025

    Curbstone Coaches #HOF Spotlight: Brian Gorby, Track and Field/Cross Country Honoree

    April 23, 2025

    Curbstone Coaches #HOF Spotlight: Doug Kuberski, Bowling Honoree

    April 16, 2025

    National Road Trip Day

    May 24, 2024

    #TravelTuesday, Holiday display marks 60 years of family tradition at Kraynaks

    November 7, 2023

    #TravelTuesday: Holiday Season Getaway…at Fair Oaks Farms

    October 31, 2023

    #TravelTuesday: Finland is the happiest country in the world – for the sixth year in a row

    October 24, 2023

    Check Out the Events this Weekend, May 16-18 in the Mahoning Valley

    May 16, 2025

    Cafaro Foundation Scholarships Awarded to 50 Students

    May 14, 2025

    Curbstone Coaches #HOF Spotlight: Jim Morrison, Contribution to Sports

    May 14, 2025

    2025 ATHENA Award Nominees Announced

    May 9, 2025
  • Get Involved
    • Nominate an Inspirational Person of the Week
    • Submit Your Video, Photo or Story
    • Subscribe to Newsletter
  • Events
  • Support Us
Spanning the Need: Good News, Inspiring, the Uninspired.
Home » Good News » Scientist Finds Saturn Doing Something Never Seen Before in Our Solar System: ‘Hiding in Plain View for 40 Years’
Science & Technology

Scientist Finds Saturn Doing Something Never Seen Before in Our Solar System: ‘Hiding in Plain View for 40 Years’

STN StaffBy STN StaffOctober 13, 20232 Comments4 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr WhatsApp VKontakte Email
SEE SWNS STORY SWNAsaturn ---STORY: Saturn's rings are heating its atmosphere, according to a new study. Scientists announced Thursday (30 Mar) the finding, which they say has never been seen before in our solar system. --- THIS PIC: (Credit: NASA/ESA/Lotfi Ben-Jaffel(IAP & LPL)/SWNS) This is a composite image showing the Saturn Lyman-alpha bulge, and 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°) latitudinal band that is 30% brighter than the surrounding regions. A small fraction of the southern hemisphere appears between the rings and the equatorial region, but it is less brighter 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. A dark spot inside the aurora region represents the footprint of the spin axis of the planet. ---
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Using data from several space missions and the Hubble telescope, an astronomer discovered that Saturn’s rings are heating its own atmosphere—something that has never been seen before in our solar system.

“The secret has been hiding in plain view for 40 years,” a NASA spokesperson announced on Thursday. “But it took the insight of a veteran astronomer to pull it all together within a year.”

“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.”

The study used images 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 telltale evidence was an excess of ultraviolet radiation, seen as a spectral line of hot hydrogen in Saturn’s atmosphere.

NASA Launches Collaboration with Industry Partners, Cleveland Schools(Opens in a new browser tab)

“The bump in radiation means that something is contaminating and heating the upper atmosphere from the outside,” explained NASA.

“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.”

NASA

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,” said the author of a paper published this week in the Planetary Science Journal, Lotfi Ben-Jaffel of the Institute of Astrophysics in Paris and the University of Arizona. “From the Cassini probe, we already knew about the rings’ influence. However, we knew nothing about the atomic hydrogen content.”

E121: A Veterans Day Special w/Leo Connelly, Jr. as he talks about hidden scars of war, PTSD and so much more. “Veterans deserve to be celebrated.”(Opens in a new browser tab)

“Everything is driven by ring particles cascading into the atmosphere at specific latitudes. They modify the upper atmosphere, changing the composition. 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—including 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 was launched by ESA, NASA, and the UK in 1978.

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),” said NASA in a press release. “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.

NASA Awards Canfield Students Flight Opportunity in TechRise Challenge(Opens in a new browser tab)

Lotfi Ben-Jaffel explained, “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.

“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.”

“At any time, at any position on the planet, we can follow the UV level of radiation. This points to the steady “ice rain” from Saturn’s rings as the best explanation.”

Ben-Jaffel concluded, “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.’”

Source Link

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr WhatsApp Email
Previous Article#POTW: Dr. James Kravec, Mercy Health Youngstown/Lorain
Next Article Scientists Find Methane is Actually Offsetting 30% of its Own Heating Effect on Planet
STN Staff

    Related Posts

    By STN StaffFebruary 4, 2025 Science & Technology

    14-year-old Invents Soap for Treating Skin Cancer and Wins Top Honor as America’s Top Young Scientist

    By STN StaffJune 10, 2024 Science & Technology

    Eerie Echo Detected Coming From Milky Way’s Black Hole 200 Years Ago (Listen)

    By Sandra JonesMay 13, 2024 Science & Technology

    How to keep your data out of the wrong hands

    By STN StaffMay 9, 2024 Science & Technology

    Largest Explosion Ever Seen is Captured by Astronomers: Nothing on this Scale Witnessed Before

    2 Comments

    1. Pingback: Scientists Find Methane is Actually Offsetting 30% of its Own Heating Effect on Planet - Spanning the Need: Good News, Inspiring, the Uninspired.

    2. Pingback: How to keep your data out of the wrong hands - Spanning the Need: Good News, Inspiring, the Uninspired.

    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    You must be logged in to post a comment.

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest good news and other great things from STN.

    Demo
    Recent Posts
    • Check Out the Events this Weekend, May 16-18 in the Mahoning Valley May 16, 2025
    • Cafaro Foundation Scholarships Awarded to 50 Students May 14, 2025
    • Curbstone Coaches #HOF Spotlight: Jim Morrison, Contribution to Sports May 14, 2025
    • 2025 ATHENA Award Nominees Announced May 9, 2025
    • Check Out the Events this Weekend, May 9-11 in the Mahoning Valley May 9, 2025
    Follow Us
    • Facebook
    • LinkedIn
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    Don't Miss
    Entertainment

    Check Out the Events this Weekend, May 16-18 in the Mahoning Valley

    By STNMay 16, 202507 Mins Read

    Embrace the festive spirit in the heart of the Mahoning Valley as it has an…

    Cafaro Foundation Scholarships Awarded to 50 Students

    May 14, 2025

    Curbstone Coaches #HOF Spotlight: Jim Morrison, Contribution to Sports

    May 14, 2025

    2025 ATHENA Award Nominees Announced

    May 9, 2025

    Check Out the Events this Weekend, May 9-11 in the Mahoning Valley

    May 9, 2025
    Newsletter

    Facebook Instagram LinkedIn YouTube
    • Home
    • About & Contact
    • Advertise with Us
    • Good News
    • Newsletter
    • Events
    © Copyright 2025. STN | Spanning the Need. All Rights Reserved. Privacy Policy & Legal Disclaimer. Website design by Gallagher Website Design

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

    Sign In or Register

    Welcome Back!

    Login to your account below.

    Lost password?