Uranus auroras

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Uranus auroras

Post by neufer » Sat Apr 14, 2012 5:04 pm

http://astrobob.areavoices.com/?blog=78068 wrote: Uranus oddball auroras seen from Earth for first time
by astrobob, April 14, 2012

<<The sun reached out to Earth this week in the form of the aurora borealis. Uranus also displays auroras but as dots instead of arcs and curtains. Auroras were seen by the Voyager 2 spacecraft during it 1986 flyby of the planet, but this is the first time they’ve been spotted from Earth.

Using the Hubble Space Telescope, astronomers photographed dim dots of aurora glowing above Uranus’ pale blue cloudtops. The Uranian lights last only a few minutes at a time before fading away, making them even trickier to catch than the earthly variety.

Auroras on both Earth and Uranus are produced when charged particles (electrons and protons) from the sun enter a planet’s magnetosphere or protective magnetic envelope, and are guided into the polar atmosphere by the planet’s magnetic field.

Earth’s magnetic field is tipped just 11 degrees relative to the our axis of rotation. When the solar wind hits, the particles travel toward the north and south polar regions, which is why auroras are visible in Earth’s more northern and southern locations than nearer the equator. Uranus is another place altogether. Its rotational axis is tilted 98 degrees compared to Earth’s modest 23.5. This means the planet literally rotates on its side like a bowling ball rolling down a lane.
Uranus's magnetic axis is way out of whack too – not only offset from the planet’s core but tilted 60 degrees relative to the rotation axis. Back during the Voyager 2 flyby, the planet’s south pole was pointed toward the sun with the magnetic poles far off to the sides. Voyager observed auroras on Uranus’ nightside resembling those on Earth. Uranus has since moved along its orbit so that now its side faces the sun instead of a geographic pole. This happy circumstance means that one of the magnetic poles points directly at the sun.

When a big blast of solar wind left the sun in September 2011, the particles sped past Earth in 2-3 days, blew by Jupiter two weeks later and arrived at Uranus in mid-November, creating the odd dots of aurora that seem to lie near the equator. They’re really near the planet’s magnetic poles!>>
http://www.agu.org/news/press/pr_archives/2012/2012-19.shtml wrote:
Uranus auroras glimpsed from Earth
AGU Release No. 12-19. 13 April 2012

<<WASHINGTON—For the first time, scientists have captured images of auroras above the giant ice planet Uranus, finding further evidence of just how peculiar a world that distant planet is. Detected by means of carefully scheduled observations from the Hubble Space Telescope, the newly witnessed Uranian light show consisted of short-lived, faint, glowing dots – a world of difference from the colorful curtains of light that often ring Earth's poles.

In the new observations, which are the first to glimpse the Uranian aurora with an Earth-based telescope, the researchers detected the luminous spots twice on the dayside of Uranus – the side that’s visible from Hubble. Previously, the distant aurora had only been measured using instruments on a passing spacecraft. Unlike auroras on Earth, which can turn the sky greens and purples for hours, the newly detected auroras on Uranus appeared to only last a couple minutes.

In general, auroras are a feature of the magnetosphere, the area surrounding a planet that is controlled by its magnetic field and shaped by the solar wind, a steady flow of charged particles emanating from the sun. Auroras are produced in the atmosphere as charged solar wind particles accelerate in the magnetosphere and are guided by the magnetic field close to the magnetic poles – that’s why the Earthly auroras are found around high latitudes.

But contrary to the Earth – or even Jupiter and Saturn – “the magnetosphere of Uranus is very poorly known,” said Laurent Lamy, with the Observatoire de Paris in Meudon, France, who led the new research. The results from his team, which includes researchers from France, the United Kingdom, and the United States, will be published Saturday in Geophysical Research Letters, a journal of the American Geophysical Union.

Auroras on Uranus are fainter than they are on Earth, and the planet is more than 4 billion kilometers (2.5 billion miles) away. Previous Earth-bound attempts to detect the faint auroras were inconclusive. Astronomers got their last good look at Uranian auroras 25 years ago when the Voyager 2 spacecraft whizzed past the planet and recorded spectra from of the radiant display. “This planet was only investigated in detail once, during the Voyager flyby, dating from 1986. Since then, we’ve had no opportunities to get new observations of this very unusual magnetosphere,” Lamy noted.

Planetary scientists know that Uranus is an oddball among the solar system’s planets when it comes to the orientation of its rotation axis. Whereas the other planets resemble spinning tops, circulating around the Sun, Uranus is like a top that was knocked on its side – but still keeps spinning.

The researchers suspect that the unfamiliar appearance of the newly observed auroras is due to Uranus’ rotational weirdness and peculiar traits of its magnetic axis. The magnetic axis is both offset from the center of the planet and lists at an angle of 60 degrees from the rotational axis – an extreme tilt compared to the 11 degree difference on Earth. Scientists theorize that Uranus’s magnetic field is generated by a salty ocean within the planet, resulting in the off-center magnetic axis.

The 2011 auroras differ not only from Earth’s auroras but also from the Uranian ones previously detected by Voyager 2. When that spacecraft made its flyby decades ago, Uranus was near its solstice – its rotational axis was pointed toward the Sun. In that configuration, the magnetic axis stayed at a large angle from the solar wind flow, producing a magnetosphere similar to the Earth’s magnetosphere, although more dynamic. Under those 1986 solstice conditions, the auroras lasted longer than the recently witnessed ones and were mainly seen on the nightside of the planet, similar to what’s observed on Earth, Lamy said. Hubble can’t see the far side of the planet, however, so researchers don’t know what types of auroras, if any, were generated there.

The new set of observations, however, is from when the planet was near equinox, when neither end of the Uranian rotational axis aims at the Sun, and the axis aligns almost perpendicular to the solar wind flow. Because the planet’s magnetic axis is tilted, the daily rotation of Uranus during the period around the equinox causes each of its magnetic poles to point once a day toward the Sun, likely responsible for a very different type of aurora than the one that was seen at solstice, Lamy explained. “This configuration is unique in the solar system,” added Lamy, who noted that the two transient, illuminated spots observed in 2011 were close to the latitude of Uranus’s northern magnetic pole.

Capturing the images of Uranus’s auroras resulted from a combination of good luck and careful planning. In 2011, Earth, Jupiter and Uranus were lined up so that the solar wind could flow from the Sun, past Earth and Jupiter, and then toward Uranus. When the Sun produced several large bursts of charged particles in mid-September 2011, the researchers used Earth-orbiting satellites to monitor the solar wind’s local arrival two to three days later. Two weeks after that, the solar wind sped past Jupiter at 500 kilometers per second (310 miles per second). Calculating that the charged particles would reach Uranus in mid-November, the team scrambled to scheduled time on the Hubble Space Telescope.

Ever since the Voyager 2 flyby demonstrated that Uranus was a “strange beast,” said Fran Bagenal, a planetary scientist with the University of Colorado in Boulder, “we’ve been really keen to get a better view. This was a very clever way of looking at that.” A better understanding of Uranus’ magnetosphere could help scientists test their theories of how Earth’s magnetosphere functions, she added. “We have ideas of how things work on Earth and places like Jupiter and Saturn, but I don’t believe you really know how things work until you test them on a very different system.”>>
Art Neuendorffer

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Re: Uranus auroras

Post by bystander » Sat Apr 14, 2012 6:10 pm

Hubble Reveals Curious Auroras on Uranus
Universe Today | Jason Major | 2012 Apr 13

ScienceShot: Hubble Spots Auroras on Uranus
Science NOW | Sid Perkins | 2012 Apr 13

Earth-based detection of Uranus' aurorae - Laurent Lamy et al
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Re: Uranus auroras

Post by bystander » Thu Apr 19, 2012 9:15 pm


Hubble Spots Aurorae on the Planet Uranus
HubbleSite | NASA/STScI | 2012 Sept 19
These are among the first clear images, taken from the distance of Earth, to show aurorae on the planet Uranus. Aurorae are produced when high-energy particles from the Sun cascade along magnetic field lines into a planet's upper atmosphere. This causes the planet's atmospheric gasses to fluoresce. The ultraviolet images were taken at the time of heightened solar activity in November 2011 that successively buffeted the Earth, Jupiter, and Uranus with a gusher of charged particles from the Sun. Because Uranus' magnetic field is inclined 59 degrees to its spin axis, the auroral spots appear far from the planet's north and south poles. This composite image combines 2011 Hubble observations of the aurorae in visible and ultraviolet light, 1986 Voyager 2 photos of the cyan disk of Uranus as seen in visible light, and 2011 Gemini Observatory observations of the faint ring system as seen in infrared light.

Credit: NASA, ESA, and L. Lamy (Observatory of Paris, CNRS, CNES)
Know the quiet place within your heart and touch the rainbow of possibility; be
alive to the gentle breeze of communication, and please stop being such a jerk.
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