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Results tagged “esa” from Breaking Orbit

Right now people in the Northern Hemisphere are enjoying the last few weeks when Venus will shine bright in the night.

Around the end of March the "evening star" becomes the "morning star," and the planet won't grace the dusk skies again until next year.

(Read more at EarthSky to find out why Venus makes this transition.)

venus-blue.jpg

Morning or night, Venus appears so bright from Earth not only because it's so close to us (a mere 26,027,649 miles, or 41,887,440 kilometers), but because its thick atmosphere is highly reflective.

Venus takes on a blueish hue in a filtered image from the Galileo orbiter
—Image courtesy NASA/JPL

It's no surprise that sunlight bouncing off Venus's atmosphere would make the planet glow. But what's perhaps even more exciting is that Venus glows on its night side too.

No, conspiracy theorists, this is not because colonies of aliens are living on the Venusian surface. Sunlight interacting with the atmosphere is still the key player.

Planets with atmospheres—including Earth, Mars, and Venus—can glow in the dark thanks to a process called chemiluminescence, a fancy way of saying "light produced by chemical reactions."

As ultraviolet light from the sun enters the atmosphere, it breaks apart some air molecules. The freed atoms can then recombine into new molecules, and in some cases the process causes the atoms to lose energy, which we see as light.

Today scientists working with ESA's Venus Express orbiter announced they have seen the first infrared signatures of nitric oxide (NO) in the nighttime atmosphere of Venus, a sure sign that chemiluminescence is under way.

night-glow-venus.jpg

According to the ESA press release, Venus's infrared nightglow has been seen before, revealing oxygen and hydroxyl. But this is the first time we've ever seen NO in the infrared on any planet.

It's a subtle distinction, but a helpful one if you're a planetary scientist.

The oxygen and hydroxyl were seen at around 56 to 62 miles (90 to 100 kilometers) above the planet's surface, while the NO is glowing at about 68 to 74 miles (110 to 120 kilometers) high.

—Image courtesy ESA/VIRTIS/INAF-IASF/Obs. de Paris-LESIA

Knowing what's where, chemically speaking, can reveal new information about Venus's atmospheric circulation, which in turn could help us refine models of atmospheric conditions on Earth.

Unless you live underground or in a very cloudy part of the world, it was pretty hard to miss the crazy conjunction of Venus and Jupiter Monday night that, when joined by the crescent moon, smiled on one side of Earth while frowning on the other.

But as millions of skywatchers reveled in that display, the folks over at ESA were preparing to release news about a slightly different view of lovely Venus.

Best known for being the brightest planet visible without the aid of a telescope, Venus gets even more interesting when you have the technology to peer under her skirts, so to speak, using wavelengths of light that are invisible to the human eye.

venus-uv.jpg

—Image courtesy ESA/MPS/DLR/IDA

In ultraviolet light, ESA's Venus Express probe shows the planet as a smoky blue sphere with roiling bands of light and dark that highlight its complex structures of sulfuric acid clouds.

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"Invisible" Auroras Mapped on Mars

Posted on November 21, 2008 | 0 Comments

Earth isn't the only planet that puts on a flashy light show.

earth-auroras.jpg

Last week Saturn was the exhibitionist, showing off a vibrant blue aurora around its northern polar hexagon. And Jupiter made the crowds cheer in 2007 with a shot of its "hyper-auroras" lighting up both poles.

—Photo by Bruce Dale/NGS

Not to be outdone, Mars is the headliner this week. A team using ESA's Mars Express orbiter used a combination of onboard instruments to track nine auroral emissions on the red planet.

Their data allowed the team to draw the first map of auroras on Mars, showing that the events coincide with regions on Mars that have the strongest magnetic fields.

mars-aurora-map.jpg

An artist's impression of auroras on Mars's night side
—Image courtesy M. Holmström (IRF)/ESA

Auroras on Mars are pretty unusual cases, because unlike Earth and the gas giants, Mars no longer has an internal dynamo generating a planet-wide magnetic field.

On Earth it's the magnetic field lines that channel streams of charged particles from the sun through the atmosphere, getting molecules all excited and causing them to emit light in the form of breathtaking auroral displays.

What Mars has are sections of the crust that were somehow magnetized, and the teams thinks it could be these regions that are attracting streams of particles, allowing auroras to occur.

The trick is that Mars's thin atmosphere is low in oxygen and molecular nitrogen, which are the elements that create visible light in Earthly auroras.

The Mars Express team's instruments see only in ultraviolet and so can't tell if any future human missions to Mars would be in for a show.

"There's now a large domain of physics that we have to explore in order to understand the aurorae on Mars," noted team member Francois Leblanc of France's Service d'Aéronomie.

There's always a twinkle in a science writer's eye when real life imitates art.

In 2005 we had a snapshot of gases and dust around a star that seemed to be auditioning for the next Lord of the Rings film.

Then in 2007 there came the news that the universe could be packed with double-sunned planets like Star Wars' Tatooine.

Earlier this year a Mars orbiter sent in high-resolution shots of a body called Phobos, highlighting its massive Stickney Crater and its uncanny resemblance to the Empire's ultimate weapon.

phobos-deathstar.jpg

With apologies to Sir Alec Guinness, this time that is a moon—Phobos is the larger of the two known natural satellites orbiting Mars.

—Image courtesy NASA/JPL-Caltech/University of Arizona

Although it was discovered way back in 1877, Phobos has remained fairly enigmatic.

In the late 1950s, its odd orbit inspired Russian astronomers to suggest that the moon is a hollow shell, and an artificial one at that.

It took almost a decade to silence that offbeat theory, based on better calculations of the moon's orbit combined with new density measurements and eventually images from the Viking mission.

But Phobos still boasts some unusual characteristics, prompting much speculation about what the moon is made of and how it took up residence around Mars.

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Venus Express Maps a Mighty Wind

Posted on September 18, 2008 | 0 Comments

If men are from Mars and women are from Venus, should we space-loving chicks be annoyed that the red planet gets so much more money and attention than its "feminine" counterpart?

Yeah, Mars is cool and all, what with its tantalizing geologic features and strong potential as a relatively recent host for liquid water.

By contrast, Venus seems so unwelcoming, shrouded in murky clouds of sulfuric acid that whirl at breakneck speed above a dusty surface hot enough to melt lead.

But underneath that hostile exterior lurks the most Earthlike planet we know of right now.

Luckily, while the U.S. is busy cheering on its army of Martian rovers, orbiters, and landers, the European Space Agency (ESA) has been sending out findings from a probe dubbed Venus Express that's been orbiting our "sister" planet since the spring of 2006.

Today ESA announced results from a study published back in July in the journal Geophysical Research Letters about the first 3-D map of venusian winds covering the entire southern hemisphere.

venus-wind-map.jpg

—ESA/VIRTIS/INAF-IASF/Obs. de Paris-LESIA/ Universidad del País Vasco (R. Hueso)

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Why's It so Dusty Down Here?

Posted on September 3, 2008 | 0 Comments

Not every meteor that slams into Earth is a dino-killing whopper. Microscopic meteorites also find their way down to the planet's surface on a regular basis, but there's been some debate about where exactly they come from.

In the September 1, 2008, issue of Geology, Mathew Genge of Imperial College London reports that a massive collection of cosmic dust grains found in Antarctic ice originally came from the Koronis asteroids, an ancient family of space rocks in the Main Belt between Mars and Jupiter.

ida-asteroid.jpg

Koronis family asteroid 243 Ida and its moon, Dactyl
—NASA/JPL

The minerals and chemicals inside these itteh-bitteh pieces of asteroid match what scientists had previously found in a small group within the Koronis family called the Karin asteroids. And sure enough, telescope observations of the Karin show those rocks are even now jiggling around and smashing into each other, producing dust.

According to Genge, the discovery means that some level of research into the origins and formation of the solar system can be accomplished without even leaving the ground.

planet-dust.jpg

"Out of the cosmic dust, a planet is born."
—NASA/JPL-Caltech/R. Hurt (SSC)

"The answer to so many important questions, such as why we are here and are we alone in the universe, may well lie inside a cosmic dust particle," Genge said in a university news release.

"Since they are everywhere, even inside our homes, we don't necessarily have to blast off the Earth to find those answers. Perhaps they are already next to you, right here and right now."

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About This Blog

The moon
From dwarf planets to hot Jupiters, join NatGeo News space and tech editor Victoria Jaggard in a global discussion about all things extraterrestrial.


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