الثلاثاء، 4 سبتمبر 2012

Image of the Day: Jupiter's Ganymede --Only Moon in Solar System with a Magnetic Field

Image of the Day: Jupiter's Ganymede --Only Moon in Solar System with a Magnetic Field
Image of the Day: Jupiter's Ganymede --Only Moon in Solar System with a Magnetic FieldThe Daily Galaxy --Great Discoveries Channel: Sci, Space, TechFollow the Daily GalaxyAdd Daily Galaxy to igoogle page AddThis Feed Button Join The Daily Galaxy Group on Facebook Follow The Daily Galaxy Group on twitter  « Getting Closer! New SuperEarth Found in Red Dwarf Habitable Zone |Main| "A New Species" of Strange Weirdly-Shaped Galaxies »

September 01, 2012 Image of the Day: Jupiter's Ganymede --Only Moon in Solar System with a Magnetic Field

 

          6a00d8341bf7f753ef01539005459b970b

 

Some scientists have seen the ultimate sky show, and the fact that the sky isn't ours only makes it cooler. Gas giant Jupiter features some epic aurora beyond-borealis (and ultra-australis) and the causes make ours look like two small sparklers in a bucket of water.

On Earth auroras are caused by the interaction between the solar wind and the upper atmosphere. Energetic particles slam into the upper atmosphere, slowing down and losing energy to electrons in the atoms already there. More electrons gain energy from magnetic fields in the solar wind particles violently rewiring themselves and our magnetosphere. Excited electrons from both processes then fall back down to their original state, emitting light as they go - different colors coming from different materials in the atmosphere.On Jupiter the idea is the same but the energetic particles come from considerably cooler sources. Hubble images show huge "auroral footprints", moving radiation zones following the moons. Ganymede causes one by being the only moon in the Solar system with its own magnetic field, which constantly interferes with Jupiter's far larger one. Io, on the other hand, is famous for its volcanoes - volcanoes which spew highly charged particles which spark and shine as they collide with the moon's host planet.

We're going to repeat that: a volcanic moon triggers vast light shows by erupting onto a vast planet. We don't even need to send that to Hollywood, the sheer coolness of the sentence ensures they'll see it somehow.

Image at top of page of Ganymede was created from more than 100 images from the Voyager and Galileo spacecraft. Most of these had a resolution of roughly 0.7-3.5/pixel km except for two relatively small areas where the resolution is considerably lower.

 

          Jupiter-ganymede-hst

The Daily Galaxy via NASA

Image via mmedia.is

Posted at 05:16 AM | Permalink



Comments
Post a comment

Name:

Email Address: (Not displayed with comment.)

URL:

Remember personal info?

Comments:

« Getting Closer! New SuperEarth Found in Red Dwarf Habitable Zone |Main| "A New Species" of Strange Weirdly-Shaped Galaxies »



















var ACE_AR = {Site: '774230', Size: '120600'};


var ACE_AR = {Site: '770549', Size: '300250'};











Our Partnerstechnology partners





ArchivesSeptember 2012August 2012July 2012June 2012May 2012April 2012March 2012February 2012January 2012December 2011About Us/Privacy PolicyFor more information on The Daily Galaxy and to contact us please visit this page.



document.write(unescape("%3Cscript src='" + (document.location.protocol == "https:" ? "https://sb" : "http://b") + ".scorecardresearch.com/beacon.js'%3E%3C/script%3E"));COMSCORE.beacon({ c1: 2, c2: "6035669", c3: "", c4: "http://www.dailygalaxy.com/my_weblog/2012/09/image-of-the-day-jupiters-ganymede-only-moon-in-solar-system-with-a-magnetic-field.html", c5: "", c6: "", c15: ""});

View the original article here


This post was made using the Auto Blogging Software from WebMagnates.org This line will not appear when posts are made after activating the software to full version.

ليست هناك تعليقات:

إرسال تعليق