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Saturn
Does the Wave in Upper Atmosphere
Wednesday, May 7, 2008
Credit:
NASA / JPL
Two decades of scrutinizing
Saturn are finally paying off, as scientists have discovered a
wave pattern, or oscillation, in Saturn's atmosphere only visible
from Earth every 15 years.
The discovery of the wave
pattern is the result of a 22-year campaign observing Saturn from
Earth (the longest study of temperature outside Earth ever
recorded), and the Cassini spacecraft's observations of
temperature changes in the giant planet's atmosphere over time.
The Cassini infrared results, which appear in the same
issue of Nature as the data from the 22-year ground-based
observing campaign, indicate that Saturn's wave pattern is
similar to a pattern found in Earth's upper atmosphere. The
earthly oscillation takes about two years. A similar pattern on
Jupiter takes more than four Earth years. The new Saturn findings
add a common link to the three planets.
Just as
scientists have been studying climate changes in Earth's
atmosphere for long periods of time, NASA scientists have been
studying changes in Saturn's atmosphere. Glenn Orton of NASA's
Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., says patience is
the key to studying changes over the course of a Saturnian year,
the equivalent of about 30 Earth years.
"You could
only make this discovery by observing Saturn over a long period
of time," said Orton, lead author of the ground-based study.
"It's like putting together 22 years worth of puzzle pieces,
collected by a hugely rewarding collaboration of students and
scientists from around the world on various telescopes."
The wave pattern is called an atmospheric oscillation. It
ripples back and forth within Saturn's upper atmosphere. In this
region, temperatures switch from one altitude to the next in a
candy cane-like, striped, hot-cold pattern. These varying
temperatures force the wind in the region to keep changing
direction from east to west, jumping back and forth. As a result,
the entire region oscillates like a wave.
A "snapshot"
of the hot-cold temperature patterns in Saturn's atmosphere was
captured by the Cassini Composite Infrared Spectrometer. Along
with Earth-based data, the "snapshot" also uncovered
other interesting phenomena. Among them: the temperature at
Saturn's equator switches from hot to cold, and temperatures on
either side of the equator switch from cold to hot every Saturn
half-year.
Mike Flasar, co-author of the Cassini paper,
and principal investigator for Cassini's Composite Infrared
Spectrometer at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt,
Md., said that Cassini helped define this oscillation in
combination with the ground observation campaign.
"It's
this great synergy of using ground-based data over time, and then
getting up close and personal with the oscillation in Saturn's
atmosphere through Cassini," said Flasar. "Without
Cassini, we might never have seen the structure of the
oscillation in detail."
Cassini scientists hope to
find out why this phenomenon on Saturn changes with the seasons,
and why the temperature switchover happens when the sun is
directly over Saturn's equator.
Source:
NASA / JPL / Diya Chacko

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