Hubble sees Aurorae on Saturn

Double aurorae on Saturn. Click for larger. Credit: NASA, ESA and Jonathan Nichols (University of Leicester)

In keeping with the mini-aurora theme, check out this Hubble view of Saturn (taken in 2009), you can see both of the planet’s aurorae. The aurorae is created by the interaction of Saturn’s magnetic field and the solar wind.

Below is the press release from The European Homepage for the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope:

An enormous and grand ringed planet, Saturn is certainly one of the most intriguing bodies orbiting the Sun. This unique Hubble image from early 2009 features Saturn with the rings edge-on and both poles in view, offering a stunning double view of its fluttering aurorae. Created by the interaction of the solar wind with the planet’s magnetic field, Saturn’s aurorae are analogous to the more familiar northern and southern light on Earth. At the time when Hubble snapped this picture, Saturn was approaching its equinox so both poles were equally illuminated by the Sun’s rays.

At first glance the light show of Saturn’s aurorae appears symmetric at the two poles. However, analysing the new data in greater detail, astronomers have discovered some subtle differences between the northern and southern aurorae, which reveal important information about Saturn’s magnetic field. The northern auroral oval is slightly smaller and more intense than the southern one, implying that Saturn’s magnetic field is not equally distributed across the planet; it is slightly uneven and stronger in the north than the south.

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