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Hubble Takes a Grand Tour of the Solar System by Staff Writers Paris (ESA) Nov 19, 2021
The NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope has completed its annual grand tour of the outer Solar System. This is the realm of the giant planets - Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune - extending as far as 30 times the distance between Earth and the Sun. Unlike the rocky terrestrial planets like Earth and Mars that huddle close to the Sun's warmth, these far-flung worlds are mostly composed of chilly gaseous soups of hydrogen, helium, ammonia, methane, and other trace gases around a packed, intensely hot, compact core. Though robotic spacecraft have sent back snapshots of their visits to these four monster planets over the past 50 years, their swirling, colourful atmospheres are constantly changing. Fulfilling the role of a weather forecaster, every time Hubble's sharp cameras revisit these worlds there are new surprises, offering fresh insights into their wild weather, driven by still largely unknown dynamics taking place under the cloudtops. Hubble's snapshots of the outer planets reveal both extreme and subtle changes rapidly taking place in these distant worlds. Hubble's sharp view gleans insights into the fascinating, dynamic weather patterns and seasons on these gas giants and allows astronomers to investigate the very similar - and very different - variables that contribute to their changing atmospheres.
Jupiter Hubble's 4 September photo puts the giant planet's tumultuous atmosphere on full display. The planet's equatorial zone is now a deep orange hue, which researchers are calling unusual. While the equator has departed from its traditional white or beige appearance for a few years now, scientists were surprised to find a deeper orange in Hubble's recent imaging, when they were expecting the zone to cloud up again. Just above the equator, researchers note the appearance of several new storms, nicknamed "barges." These elongated red cells can be defined as cyclonic vortices, which vary in appearance. Whilst some of the storms are sharply defined and clear, others are fuzzy and hazy. This difference in appearance is caused by the physical properties within the clouds of the vortices. Researchers also note that a feature dubbed "Red Spot Jr." (Oval BA), below the Great Red Spot where Hubble just discovered winds are speeding up, is still a darker beige colour, and is joined by several additional white, cyclonic storms to the south. Hubble's crisp views of Jupiter in 2020 was one of the most popular ESA/Hubble photo releases to date.
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NASA's next steps to return Hubble to normal operation status Baltimore MD (SPX) Nov 18, 2021 The Hubble Space Telescope's Advanced Camera for Surveys has continued collecting science data as NASA works to address the anomaly that started Oct 25. Missed synchronization messages halted science production at that time, and the team has identified no additional missed messages since monitoring began Nov. 1. Hubble's additional instruments have remained in safe mode while NASA takes steps to recover them to operational status. The rest of the telescope is operating as expected. During th ... read more
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