Saturday, March 25, 2023

Saturn's Moon Titan Could Reveal Chemistry Leading to Life | NASA Dragonfly

Saturn's Moon Titan Could Reveal Chemistry Leading to Life | NASA Dragonfly

The colorful globe of Saturn's largest moon, Titan, passes in front of the planet and its rings in this true color snapshot from NASA's Cassini spacecraft.

Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Space Science Institute

This illustration shows NASA’s Dragonfly rotorcraft-lander. Taking advantage of Titan’s dense atmosphere and low gravity, Dragonfly will explore dozens of locations across the icy world, sampling and measuring the compositions of Titan's organic surface materials to characterize the habitability of Titan’s environment and investigate the progression of prebiotic chemistry.

Credits: NASA/JHU-APL

A new NASA mission to Saturn’s giant moon, Titan, is due to launch in 2027. When it arrives in the mid-2030s, it will begin a journey of discovery that could bring about a new understanding of the development of life in the universe. This mission, called Dragonfly, will carry an instrument called the Dragonfly Mass Spectrometer (DraMS), designed to help scientists hone in on the chemistry at work on Titan. It may also shed light on the kinds of chemical steps that occurred on Earth that ultimately led to the formation of life, called prebiotic chemistry.

Titan's abundant complex carbon-rich chemistry, interior ocean, and past presence of liquid water on the surface make it an ideal destination to study prebiotic chemical processes and the potential habitability of an extraterrestrial environment.

DraMS will allow scientists back on Earth to remotely study the chemical makeup of the Titanian surface. “We want to know if the type of chemistry that could be important for early pre-biochemical systems on Earth is taking place on Titan,” explains Dr. Melissa Trainer of NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Maryland.

Trainer is a planetary scientist and astrobiologist who specializes in Titan and is one of the Dragonfly mission’s deputy principal investigators. She is also lead on the DraMS instrument, which will scan through measurements of samples from Titan’s surface material for evidence of prebiotic chemistry.

To accomplish this, the Dragonfly robotic rotorcraft will capitalize on Titan’s low gravity and dense atmosphere to fly between different points of interest on Titan’s surface, spread as far as several miles apart. This allows Dragonfly to relocate its entire suite of instruments to a new site when the previous one has been fully explored, and provides access to samples in environments with a variety of geologic histories.

At each site, samples less than a gram in size will be drilled out of the surface by the Drill for Acquisition of Complex Organics (DrACO) and brought inside the lander’s main body, to a place called the “attic” that houses the DraMS instrument. There, they will be irradiated by an onboard laser or vaporized in an oven to be measured by DraMS. A mass spectrometer is an instrument that analyzes the various chemical components of a sample by separating these components down into their base molecules and passing them through sensors for identification.

“DraMS is designed to look at the organic molecules that may be present on Titan, at their composition and distribution in different surface environments,” says Trainer. Organic molecules contain carbon and are used by all known forms of life. They are of interest in understanding the formation of life because they can be created by living and non-living processes.

Mass spectrometers determine what’s in a sample by ionizing the material (that is, bombarding it with energy so that the atoms therein become positively or negatively charged) and examining the chemical composition of the various compounds. This involves determining the relationship between the weight of the molecule and its charge, which serves as a signature for the compound.

DraMS was developed in part by the same team at Goddard which developed the Sample Analysis at Mars (SAM) instrument suite aboard the Curiosity rover. DraMS is designed to survey samples of Titanian surface material in situ, using techniques tested on Mars with the SAM suite.

Trainer emphasized the benefits of this heritage. Dragonfly’s scientists did not want to “reinvent the wheel” when it came to searching for organic compounds on Titan, and instead built on established methods which have been applied on Mars and elsewhere. “This design has given us an instrument that’s very flexible, that can adapt to the different types of surface samples,” says Trainer.

DraMS and other science instruments on Dragonfly are being designed and built under the direction of the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory in Laurel, Maryland, which manages the mission for NASA and is designing and building the rotorcraft-lander. The team includes key partners at Goddard, the French space agency (CNES, Paris, France), which is providing the Gas Chromatograph Module for DraMS that will provide an additional separation after leaving the oven, Lockheed Martin Space, Littleton, Colorado, NASA Ames Research Center at Moffett Federal Airfield in California's Silicon Valley, NASA Langley Research Center, Hampton, Virginia, NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, California, Penn State University, State College, Pennsylvania, Malin Space Science Systems, San Diego, California, Honeybee Robotics, Brooklyn, New York, the German Aerospace Center (DLR), Cologne, Germany, and the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA), Tokyo, Japan.

Dragonfly is the fourth mission in NASA’s New Frontiers program. New Frontiers is managed by NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, for the agency's Science Mission Directorate Washington.

Learn more about Saturn's Titan  Moon: 

https://solarsystem.nasa.gov/moons/saturn-moons/titan/overview/

Learn about the Dragonfly rotorcraft:

https://www.jhuapl.edu/work/projects/dragonfly


Credit: NASA Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC)

Writer: Nick Oakes

Release Date: March 17, 2023


#NASA #Astronomy #Space #Science #SolarSystem #SpaceExploration #Planet #Saturn #Moon #Titan #OceanWorld #Methane #DragonflyMission #Rotorcraft #Lander #Spacecraft #CassiniMission #NewFrontiers #GSFC #MSFC #NASAAmes #JHUAPL #UnitedStates #France #Germany #Animation #Art #STEM #Education

Exploring the Ocean Worlds of Our Solar System | NASA/JHUAPL

Exploring the Ocean Worlds of Our Solar System | NASA/JHUAPL

Our solar system is home to many fascinating and mysterious worlds. Among them are the ocean worlds—planets and moons with vast oceans beneath their surfaces. Who knows what other ocean worlds are waiting to be discovered in the deepest reaches of our solar system. Studying these worlds could help us understand the origins of life in our solar system . . . And, perhaps, beyond.

Learn more: https://www.jhuapl.edu/work/our-organization/civil-space


Credit: Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory (JHU-APL)

Duration: 1 minute

Release Date: March 25, 2023

#NASA #Astronomy #Space #Science #SolarSystem #SpaceExploration #Planets #Moons #OceanWorlds #Jupiter #Europa #EuropaClipper #Spacecraft #Saturn #Titan #MethaneLakes #DragonflyMission #Rotorcraft #Lander #Enceladus #Uranus #Neptune #JPL #JHUAPL #UnitedStates #STEM #Education #Animation #HD #Video

A Meandering Spiral Galaxy: NGC 5486 | Hubble

A Meandering Spiral Galaxy: NGC 5486 | Hubble

The irregular spiral galaxy NGC 5486 hangs against a background of dim, distant galaxies in this image from the NASA/European Space Agency Hubble Space Telescope. The tenuous disc of the galaxy is threaded through with pink wisps of star formation, which stand out from the diffuse glow of the galaxy’s bright core. NGC 5486 lies 110 million light-years from Earth in the constellation Ursa Major.


Credit: European Space Agency (ESA)/Hubble & NASA, C. Kilpatrick  

Duration: 30 seconds

Release Date: March 23, 2023


#NASA #Hubble #Astronomy #Space #Science #Galaxy #NGC5486 #IrregularGalaxy #Spiral #Galaxies #UrsaMajor #Constellation #Cosmos #Universe #HST #SpaceTelescope #ESA #Europe #GSFC #STScI #UnitedStates #STEM #Education #HD #Video

Mars Images: March 2023 | NASA's Curiosity & Perseverance Rovers + Ingenuity

Mars Images: March 2023 | NASA's Curiosity & Perseverance Rovers + Ingenuity


Mars2020 - sol 743


Ingenuity - sol 567


MSL - sol 173


MSL - sol 3776


MSL - sol 3776


Mars2020 - sol 743


Mars2020 - sol 742

Celebrating 10 Years+ on Mars! (2012-2023)

Mission Name: Mars Science Laboratory (MSL)

Rover Name: Curiosity

Main Job: To determine if Mars was ever habitable to microbial life. 

Launch: Nov. 6, 2011

Landing Date: Aug. 5, 2012, Gale Crater, Mars


Mission Name: Mars 2020

Rover Name: Perseverance

Main Job: Seek signs of ancient life and collect samples of rock and regolith (broken rock and soil) for possible return to Earth.

Mars Helicopter (Ingenuity)

Launch: July 30, 2020    

Landing: Feb. 18, 2021, Jezero Crater, Mars


For more information on NASA's Mars missions, visit: mars.nasa.gov


Image Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech/ASU/MSSS

Processing: Kevin M. Gill

Image Release Dates: March 23-24, 2023


#NASA #Space #Astronomy #Science #Planet #Mars #RedPlanet #Astrobiology #Geology #CuriosityRover #MSL #MountSharp #GaleCrater #PerseveranceRover #Mars2020 #Ingenuity #MarsHelicopter #JezeroCrater #Robotics #Technology #Engineering #JPL #UnitedStates #MoonToMars #CitizenScience #STEM #Education

Friday, March 24, 2023

The Artemis II Moon Rocket is Coming Together | This Week @NASA

The Artemis II Moon Rocket is Coming Together This Week @NASA 

Week of March 24, 2023: The Artemis II Moon Rocket is Coming Together, a high honor for some space explorers, and an intriguing find for the Webb Space Telescope . . . a few of the stories to tell you about—This Week at NASA!


Credit: National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)

Duration: 2 minutes, 19 seconds

Release Date: March 24, 2023


#NASA #Space #Astronomy #JWST #Exoplanet #Moon #Artemis #ArtemisII #Orion #Spacecraft #SLS #Rocket #DeepSpace #Astronaut #BillAnders #Mars #MoonToMars #Science #Engineering #Robotics #Technology #SpaceExploration #SolarSystem #UnitedStates #STEM #Education #HD #Video

Faces of Technology – Meet Ali Guarneros Luna | NASA Space Tech

Faces of Technology – Meet Ali Guarneros Luna | NASA Space Tech

Meet Ali Guarneros Luna, an aerospace engineer at NASA's Ames Research Center who works on CubeSat technologies to explore our solar system. Ali helps companies create state-of-the-art technologies that NASA needs for these future space missions. 

To learn more about NASA's Tipping Points partnerships, visit: 

https://www.nasa.gov/directorates/spacetech/solicitations/tipping_points/


Credit: NASA Space Tech

Duration: 1 minute, 26 seconds

Release Date: March 24, 2023


#NASA #Space #Astronomy #Engineering #AerospaceEngineering #NASAAmes #ARC #AliGuarnerosLuna #Engineers #Women #Leaders #Mentors #Pioneers #Inspiration #CubeSats #Technology #SpaceExploration #SolarSystem #STEM #Education #HD #Video

2023 Michael Collins Trophy Winners | The James Webb Space Telescope Team

2023 Michael Collins Trophy Winners | The James Webb Space Telescope Team

The international James Webb Space Telescope Team has been awarded the 2023 Michael Collins Trophy for Current Achievement. The James Webb Space Telescope, the largest, most powerful space telescope ever deployed, captured public attention in July 2022 when the team released its first  scientific images and data. Since beginning science operations last year, scientists have used the James Webb Space Telescope to make exciting discoveries across many fields of astronomy—and there is so much more to come. 

The Michael Collins Trophy is awarded annually by the Smithsonian's National Air and Space Museum.

Webb is the largest, most powerful telescope ever launched into space. 

Webb is an international partnership between NASA, the European Space Agency (ESA) and the Canadian Space Agency (CSA).

Under an international collaboration agreement, the European Space Agency provided the telescope’s launch service, using the Ariane 5 launch vehicle. Working with partners, ESA was responsible for the development and qualification of Ariane 5 adaptations for the Webb mission and for the procurement of the launch service by Arianespace.

The Canadian Space Agency contributed two important elements, built by Honeywell, to the Webb Telescope:

1) the Fine Guidance Sensor (FGS), which allows the telescope to point at and focus on objects of interest

2) the Near-Infrared Imager and Slitless Spectrograph (NIRISS), a scientific instrument that helps study many astronomical objects, from exoplanets to distant galaxies


Credit: The Smithsonian's National Air and Space Museum

Duration: 4 minutes

Release Date: March 24, 2023


#NASA #ESA #Astronomy #Space #Science #CollinsTrophy #Stars #Nebulas #Exoplanets #Galaxies #JamesWebb #SpaceTelescope #JWST #Cosmos #Universe #UnfoldTheUniverse #Europe #CSA #Canada #GSFC #STScI #AirandSpaceMuseum #SmithsonianInstitution #UnitedStates #STEM #Education #HD #Video

Historic Asteroid Sample Delivery on Sept. 24, 2023 | NASA OSIRIS-REx

Historic Asteroid Sample Delivery on Sept. 24, 2023 | NASA OSIRIS-REx

NASA's OSIRIS-REx spacecraft is cruising back to Earth with a sample it collected from the rocky surface of asteroid Bennu. When its sample capsule parachutes down into the Utah desert on Sept. 24, 2023, OSIRIS-REx will become the United States’ first-ever mission to return an asteroid sample to Earth.


Credit: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC)

James Tralie (ADNET):

Lead Producer

Lead Editor

Narrator

Walt Feimer (KBRwyle):

Animator

Jonathan North (KBRwyle):

Animator

Michael Lentz (KBRwyle):

Animator

Adriana Manrique Gutierrez (KBRwyle):

Animator

Krystofer Kim (KBRwyle):

Animator

Duration: 1 minute

Release Date: March 24, 2023


#NASA #Astronomy #Space #Science #OSIRISREx #Spacecraft #Asteroid #Bennu #ToBennuAndBack #Organics #Minerals #Mapping #SampleReturn #Technology #GSFC #CSA #JAXA #Japan #日本 #UnitedStates #SolarSystem #Exploration #STEM #Education #Animation #HD #Video

NASA's Space to Ground: It's All About Science | Week of March 24, 2023

NASA's Space to Ground: It's All About Science | Week of March 24, 2023

NASA's Space to Ground is your weekly update on what's happening aboard the International Space Station. The Expedition 68 crew members conducted experiments and maintained equipment aboard the International Space Station while activities for cargo transfers continued.

Follow Expedition 68 crew updates at: https://blogs.nasa.gov/spacestation/

Learn more about the important research being operated on Station:
For more information about STEM on Station:
Science, Technology, Engineering, Math (STEM)

Expedition 68 Crew (March 2023)
Station Commander: Sergey Prokopyev of Roscosmos (Russia)
Roscosmos (Russia): Flight Engineers Dmitri Petelin & Andrey Fedyaev
Flight Engineer Sultan Alneyadi of the United Arab Emirates (UAE)
NASA: Flight Engineers Frank Rubio, Stephen Bowen, Warren Hoburg

An international partnership of space agencies provides and operates the elements of the International Space Station (ISS). The principals are the space agencies of the United States, Russia, Europe, Japan, and Canada. The ISS has been the most politically complex space exploration program ever undertaken.

Credit: NASA's Johnson Space Center (JSC)

Duration: 2 minutes, 33 seconds

Release Date: March 23, 2023

#NASA #Space #ISS #Earth #Astronauts #Cosmonauts #HumanSpaceflight #Expedition68 #Technology #Engineering #UnitedStates #Russia #UAE #International #Research #Laboratory #STEM #Education #HD #Video

Rocket Lab's Electron Launches Earth Observation Satellites from New Zealand

Rocket Lab's Electron Launches Earth Observation Satellites from New Zealand








Just seven days after a successful Electron mission from Launch Complex 2 in Virginia, USA, Rocket Lab has completed another successful mission from the other side of the planet at Launch Complex 1 in New Zealand, demonstrating responsive launch capability from two hemispheres and setting a new company record for fastest turnaround between Electron missions.

The mission also saw Rocket Lab successfully splash down Electron’s first stage in the ocean as part of the Company’s plan to make Electron a reusable rocket.

Rocket Lab USA, Inc. launched its 35th Electron rocket from Mahia, New Zealand, deploying two multi-spectral Gen-2 satellites to low Earth orbit for BlackSky through launch services provider Spaceflight, Inc.  

The mission, named “The Beat Goes On,” lifted off at 09:14 UTC, March 24, 2023, from Pad B at Launch Complex 1, Rocket Lab’s private launch site on New Zealand’s Mahia Peninsula.

“The Beat Goes On” mission will deploy two BlackSky high-resolution, multi-spectral, Gen-2 satellites. As a secondary mission, Rocket Lab plans to recover Electron’s first stage after it parachutes back to Earth and splashes down in the ocean.


Credit: Rocket Lab

Release Date: March 24, 2023


#NASA #Space #Earth #Satellites #RocketLab #Electron #Rocket #Launch #BlackSky #EarthObservation #RemoteSensing #GeospatialIntelligence #NewZealand #MahiaPeninsula #CommercialSpace #PeterBeck #Technology #Engineering #STEM #Education

Rocket Lab's Electron Launches Earth Observation Satellites from New Zealand

Rocket Lab's Electron Launches Earth Observation Satellites from New Zealand

Just seven days after a successful Electron mission from Launch Complex 2 in Virginia, USA, Rocket Lab has completed another successful mission from the other side of the planet at Launch Complex 1 in New Zealand, demonstrating responsive launch capability from two hemispheres and setting a new company record for fastest turnaround between Electron missions.   

The mission also saw Rocket Lab successfully splash down Electron’s first stage in the ocean as part of the Company’s plan to make Electron a reusable rocket.

Rocket Lab USA, Inc. launched its 35th Electron rocket from Mahia, New Zealand, deploying two multi-spectral Gen-2 satellites to low Earth orbit for BlackSky through launch services provider Spaceflight, Inc.  

The mission, named “The Beat Goes On,” lifted off at 09:14 UTC, March 24, 2023, from Pad B at Launch Complex 1, Rocket Lab’s private launch site on New Zealand’s Mahia Peninsula.

“The Beat Goes On” mission will deploy two BlackSky high-resolution, multi-spectral, Gen-2 satellites. As a secondary mission, Rocket Lab plans to recover Electron’s first stage after it parachutes back to Earth and splashes down in the ocean.


Credit: Rocket Lab

Duration: 4 minutes, 30 seconds

Release Date: March 24, 2023


#NASA #Space #Earth #Satellites #RocketLab #Electron #Rocket #Launch #BlackSky #EarthObservation #RemoteSensing #GeospatialIntelligence #NewZealand #MahiaPeninsula #CommercialSpace #PeterBeck #Technology #Engineering #STEM #Education #HD #Video

Thursday, March 23, 2023

Panning over Dwarf Galaxy UGCA 307 in Corvus | Hubble

Panning over Dwarf Galaxy UGCA 307 in Corvus | Hubble

UGCA 307 hangs against an irregular backdrop of distant galaxies in this image from the NASA/European Space Agency Hubble Space Telescope. This small galaxy consists of a diffuse band of stars containing red bubbles of gas that mark regions of recent star formation, and lies roughly 26 million light-years from Earth in the constellation Corvus. Appearing as just a small patch of stars, UGCA 307 is a diminutive dwarf galaxy without a defined structure—resembling nothing more than a hazy patch of passing cloud.


Credit: European Space Agency (ESA)/Hubble & NASA, R. Tully  

Duration: 30 seconds

Release Date: March 23, 2023


#NASA #Hubble #Astronomy #Space #Science #Galaxy #UGCA307 #DwarfGalaxy #Corvus #Constellation #Cosmos #Universe #HST #SpaceTelescope #ESA #Europe #GSFC #STScI #UnitedStates #STEM #Education #HD #Video

Pan across a Galactic Jellyfish: Galaxy JW100 | Hubble Space Telescope

Pan across a Galactic Jellyfish: Galaxy JW100 | Hubble Space Telescope

The galaxy JW100 features prominently in this image from the NASA/European Space Agency Hubble Space Telescope, with streams of star-forming gas dripping from the disc of the galaxy like streaks of fresh paint. These tendrils of bright gas are formed by a process called ram pressure stripping, and their resemblance to dangling tentacles has led astronomers to refer to JW100 as a ‘jellyfish’ galaxy. It is located in the constellation Pegasus, over 800 million light-years away.


Credit: European Space Agency (ESA)/Hubble & NASA, M. Gullieuszik and the GASP team

Duration: 30 seconds

Release Date: March 23, 2023


#NASA #Hubble #Astronomy #Space #Science #Galaxy #JW100 #Galaxies #IC 5337 #IC5338 #Pegasus #Constellation #Cosmos #Universe #HST #SpaceTelescope #ESA #Europe #GSFC #STScI #UnitedStates #STEM #Education #HD #Video

NASA's SpaceX Crew-4 Visits Kennedy Space Center to Thank Employees

NASA's SpaceX Crew-4 Visits Kennedy Space Center to Thank Employees


NASA astronaut Kjell Lindgren (left) presents a photo to Kennedy Space Center Deputy Director Kelvin Manning on March 22, 2023, on behalf of the astronaut corps to thank Kennedy employees for supporting NASA’s SpaceX Crew-4 launch. To the right of Manning are NASA astronauts Bob Hines and Jessica Watkins. Lindgren, Hines, and Watkins, along with the European Space Agency astronaut Samantha Cristoforetti, launched to the International Space Station aboard a SpaceX Crew Dragon spacecraft on April 27, 2022, from the Florida spaceport’s Launch Complex 39A. The crew remained at the orbiting laboratory for approximately six months, conducting critical science as part of the fourth crew rotation mission for NASA’s Commercial Crew Program.

Credit: NASA/Kim Shiflett

Release Date: March 22, 2023


#NASA #Space #Earth #ISS #Science #SpaceX #CrewDragon #CrewDragonFreedom #SpaceXCrew4 #Spacecraft #Astronauts #KjellLindgren #JessicaWatkins #RobertHines #HumanSpaceflight #JSC #KSC #KennedySpaceCenter #Spaceport #Florida #UnitedStates #STEM #Education

Planet Uranus: Nov. 2014 & Nov. 2022 | Hubble Space Telescope

Planet Uranus: Nov. 2014 & Nov. 2022 | Hubble Space Telescope

Planetary oddball Uranus rolls around the Sun on its side as it follows its 84-year orbit, rather than spinning in a more ’vertical’ position as Earth does. Its weirdly tilted ‘horizontal’ rotation axis is angled just eight degrees off the plane of the planet’s orbit. One recent theory proposes that Uranus once had a massive moon that gravitationally destabilized it and then crashed into it. Other possibilities include giant impacts during the formation of the planets, or even giant planets exerting resonant torques on each other over time. The consequences of Uranus’s tilt are that for stretches of time lasting up to 42 years, parts of one hemisphere are completely without sunlight. When the Voyager 2 spacecraft visited during the 1980s, the planet’s south pole was pointed almost directly at the Sun. Hubble’s latest view shows the northern pole now tipping toward the Sun.

[LEFT] - This is a Hubble view of Uranus taken in 2014, seven years after the northern spring equinox when the Sun was shining directly over the planet’s equator, and shows one of the first images from the OPAL program. Multiple storms with methane ice-crystal clouds appear at mid-northern latitudes above the planet’s cyan-tinted lower atmosphere. Hubble photographed the ring system edge-on in 2007, but the rings are seen starting to open up seven years later in this view. At this time, the planet had multiple small storms and even some faint cloud bands.

[RIGHT] - As seen in 2022, Uranus’s north pole shows a thickened photochemical haze that looks similar to the smog over cities. Several little storms can be seen near the edge of the polar haze boundary. Hubble has been tracking the size and brightness of the north polar cap and it continues to get brighter year after year. Astronomers are disentangling multiple effects—from atmospheric circulation, particle properties, and chemical processes—that control how the atmospheric polar cap changes with the seasons. At the Uranian equinox in 2007, neither pole was particularly bright. As the northern summer solstice approaches in 2028 the cap may grow brighter still, and will be aimed directly toward Earth, allowing good views of the rings and the north pole; the ring system will then appear face-on. This image was taken on November 10, 2022.

Image Description: Two views of the tipped planet Uranus appear side-by-side for comparison.


Credit: NASA, European Space Agency (ESA), STScI, A. Simon (NASA-GSFC), M. H. Wong (UC Berkeley), J. DePasquale (STScI)

Release Date: March 23, 2023


#NASA #ESA #Space #Astronomy #Science #Hubble #Planet #Jupiter #Moon #Io #SolarSystem #Exploration #HST #SpaceTelescope #GSFC #STScI #UnitedStates #Europe #Infographic #STEM #Education

Planet Jupiter & Io Moon: Nov. 2022 | Hubble Space Telescope

Planet Jupiter & Io Moon: Nov. 2022 | Hubble Space Telescope
The forecast for Jupiter is for stormy weather at low northern latitudes. A prominent string of alternating storms is visible, forming a ‘vortex street’ as some planetary astronomers call it. This is a wave pattern of nested cyclones and anticyclones, locked together like the alternating gears of a machine moving clockwise and counterclockwise. If the storms get close enough to each other and merge together, they could build an even larger storm, potentially rivalling the current size of the Great Red Spot. The staggered pattern of cyclones and anticyclones prevents individual storms from merging. Activity is also seen interior to these storms; in the 1990s Hubble did not see any cyclones or anticyclones with built-in thunderstorms, but these storms have sprung up in the last decade. Strong color differences indicate that Hubble is seeing different cloud heights and depths as well.

The orange moon Io photobombs this view of Jupiter’s multicolored cloud tops, casting a shadow toward the planet’s western limb. Hubble’s resolution is so sharp that it can see Io’s mottled-orange appearance, the result of its numerous active volcanoes. These volcanoes were first discovered when the Voyager 1 spacecraft flew by in 1979. The moon’s molten interior is overlaid by a thin crust through which the volcanoes eject material. Sulphur takes on various hues at different temperatures, which is why Io’s surface is so colorful. This photo was taken on November 12, 2022.

Image Description: Jupiter looms large in this image. Set against a black background, the planet is banded in stripes of brownish orange, light gray, soft yellow, and shades of cream. White and cream colored ovals punctuate the planet at all latitudes.

Credit: NASA, European Space Agency (ESA), Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI), A. Simon (NASA-GSFC), M. H. Wong (UC Berkeley), J. DePasquale (STScI)
Release Date: March 23, 2023

#NASA #ESA #Space #Astronomy #Science #Hubble #Planet #Jupiter #Moon #Io #SolarSystem #Exploration #HST #SpaceTelescope #GSFC #STScI #UnitedStates #Europe #STEM #Education