Datei:PIA01278 Hubble Tracks Clouds on Uranus.jpg

Datei:PIA01278 Hubble Tracks Clouds on Uranus.jpg

Originaldatei(1.074 × 737 Pixel, Dateigröße: 59 KB, MIME-Typ: image/jpeg)

Diese Datei stammt aus Wikimedia Commons und kann von anderen Projekten verwendet werden. Die Beschreibung von deren Dateibeschreibungsseite wird unten angezeigt.

Beschreibung

Beschreibung

Original Caption Released with Image: Taking its first peek at Uranus, NASA Hubble Space Telescope's Near Infrared Camera and Multi-Object Spectrometer (NICMOS) has detected six distinct clouds in images taken July 28,1997.

The image on the right, taken 90 minutes after the left-hand image, shows the planet's rotation. Each image is a composite of three near-infrared images. They are called false-color images because the human eye cannot detect infrared light. Therefore, colors corresponding to visible light were assigned to the images. (The wavelengths for the "blue," "green," and "red" exposures are 1.1, 1.6, and 1.9 micrometers, respectively.)

At visible and near-infrared light, sunlight is reflected from hazes and clouds in the atmosphere of Uranus. However, at near-infrared light, absorption by gases in the Uranian atmosphere limits the view to different altitudes, causing intense contrasts and colors.

In these images, the blue exposure probes the deepest atmospheric levels. A blue color indicates clear atmospheric conditions, prevalent at mid-latitudes near the center of the disk. The green exposure is sensitive to absorption by methane gas, indicating a clear atmosphere; but in hazy atmospheric regions, the green color is seen because sunlight is reflected back before it is absorbed. The green color around the south pole (marked by "+") shows a strong local haze. The red exposure reveals absorption by hydrogen, the most abundant gas in the atmosphere of Uranus. Most sunlight shows patches of haze high in the atmosphere. A red color near the limb (edge) of the disk indicates the presence of a high-altitude haze. The purple color to the right of the equator also suggests haze high in the atmosphere with a clear atmosphere below.

The five clouds visible near the right limb rotated counterclockwise during the time between both images. They reach high into the atmosphere, as indicated by their red color. Features of such high contrast have never been seen before on Uranus. The clouds are almost as large as continents on Earth, such as Europe. Another cloud (which barely can be seen) rotated along the path shown by the black arrow. It is located at lower altitudes, as indicated by its green color.

The rings of Uranus are extremely faint in visible light but quite prominent in the near infrared. The brightest ring, the epsilon ring, has a variable width around its circumference. Its widest and thus brightest part is at the top in this image. Two fainter, inner rings are visible next to the epsilon ring.

Eight of the 10 small Uranian satellites, discovered by Voyager 2, can be seen in both images. Their sizes range from about 25 miles (40 kilometers) for Bianca to 100 miles (150 kilometers) for Puck. The smallest of these satellites have not been detected since the departure of Voyager 2 from Uranus in 1986. These eight satellites revolve around Uranus in less than a day. The inner ones are faster than the outer ones. Their motion in the 90 minutes between both images is marked in the right panel. The area outside the rings was slightly enhanced in brightness to improve the visibility of these faint satellites.

The Wide Field/Planetary Camera 2 was developed by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory and managed by the Goddard Spaced Flight Center for NASA's Office of Space Science.

This image and other images and data received from the Hubble Space Telescope are posted on the World Wide Web on the Space Telescope Science Institute home page at URL http://oposite.stsci.edu/pubinfo/
Datum
Quelle http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA01278 (image link)
Urheber NASA/JPL/STScI
Diese Mediendatei wurde vom Jet Propulsion Lab der US-amerikanischen National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) unter der Datei-ID PIA01278 UND der Alternativen Datei-ID STSCI-PRC97-36A kategorisiert.

Diese Markierung zeigt nicht den Urheberrechtsstatus des zugehörigen Werks an. Es ist in jedem Falle zusätzlich eine normale Lizenzvorlage erforderlich. Siehe Commons:Lizenzen für weitere Informationen.
Sprachen:

Lizenz

Public domain Diese Datei ist gemeinfrei (public domain), da sie von der NASA erstellt worden ist. Die NASA-Urheberrechtsrichtlinie besagt, dass „NASA-Material nicht durch Urheberrecht geschützt ist, wenn es nicht anders angegeben ist“. (NASA-Urheberrechtsrichtlinie-Seite oder JPL Image Use Policy).
Warnung:

Kurzbeschreibungen

Ergänze eine einzeilige Erklärung, was diese Datei darstellt.

In dieser Datei abgebildete Objekte

Motiv

Dateiversionen

Klicke auf einen Zeitpunkt, um diese Version zu laden.

Version vomVorschaubildMaßeBenutzerKommentar
aktuell23:33, 26. Feb. 2014Vorschaubild der Version vom 23:33, 26. Feb. 20141.074 × 737 (59 KB)wikimediacommons>HuntsterSlightly larger version.