Saturn's Infrared Temperature Snapshot
Credit: NASA/JPL, Posted on: Thursday, 8 May 2008, 06:51 CDT Download full size image
Scientists have discovered a wave pattern, or oscillation, in Saturn's atmosphere only visible from Earth every 15 years. The pattern ripples back and forth like a wave within Saturn's upper atmosphere. In this region, temperatures switch from one altitude to the next in a candy cane-like, striped, hot-cold pattern.
The temperature "snapshot" shown in these two images captures two different phases of this wave oscillation: the temperature at Saturn's equator switches from hot to cold, and temperatures on either side of the equator switch from cold to hot every Saturn half-year.
The image on the left was taken in 1997 and shows the temperature at the equator is colder than the temperature at 13 degrees south latitude. Conversely, the image on the right taken in 2006 shows the temperature at the equator is warmer.
More Images

Echus Chasma Perspective View.The High-Resolution Stereo Camera (HRSC) on board ESA’s Mars Express has returned images of Ech...

Titan: Banded Moon.This Cassini spacecraft view of Titan shows banding in the atmosphere of the moon's northern hemi...
Latest Thoughts
Spacecraft Sees Earth as an Alien World
Three Red Spots Mix it Up on Jupiter
Learning Science Through Matchbox Racing
Activating the Body's Own Cancer Killing Cells
Racial Myth Debunked Regarding Heart Failure Medication
Seeing and Hearing the Invisible World













RSS Feeds