Europa helps solve mystery of Jupiter’s missing belt

By ANI
Thursday, February 10, 2011

WASHINGTON - Astronomers can now see the ongoing turmoil inside Jupiter’s missing - and slowly re-emerging - South Equatorial Belt in unprecedented detail, courtesy the Keck II telescope’s adaptive optics system and the cooperation of the icy Jovian moon Europa.

In this newly released Keck image, the gas giant is shown as it looks in thermal infrared (IR) light, at a wavelength of nearly 5 microns (shown in bright red and yellow), overlaid on a composite image of three shorter, near-infrared bands (1.21, 1.58, and 1.65 microns).

“The thermal IR senses breaks in the cloud cover,” said astronomer Mike Wong of the University of California at Berkeley.

The thermal IR data is essentially showing heat from Jupiter’s interior being radiated into space. The three other IR bands, in contrast, capture reflected sunlight.

Put them all together and compare them to visible light images and scientists get a picture of a thinning, breaking layer of high, bright, icy clouds that have obscured the brown-red South Equatorial Belt (SEB) for about a year, making it look like a wide white zone.

“We see wispy cloud-free regions at 5 microns in the SEB,” said Wong. “But they are much less extensive than the near-infrared dark regions surrounding them. The data show that the change from zone-like to belt-like appearance is a complex process that takes place at different speeds in each layer of Jupiter’s atmosphere.”

The four-band infrared image was created using a clever twist on the Keck II telescope’s adaptive optics, which effectively cancels out much of the interference of Earth’s atmosphere.

Normally astronomers use a powerful laser to create an artificial guide star. With that they can monitor Earth’s constantly changing atmosphere and cancel out the distortions at a rate of up to 2,000 times per second.

But Jupiter is so bright that it hides the laser guide star. The astronomers needed something much brighter that was also very close to Jupiter in the sky. On November 30, 2010, the icy Jovian moon Europa was positioned just right to serve that purpose, explained Franck Marchis, also of UC Berkeley and the SETI Institute.

Timing observations right so that Europa makes adaptive optics possible is no easy feat, according to Marchis, and underscores the technical challenges involved in peering into Jupiter’s clouds.

Despite many other researchers watching Jupiter’s changing clouds with other telescopes, none, not even the Hubble Space Telescope, is equipped to peer in the 5-micron band with such high resolution.

Marchis, Wong, and UC Berkeley astronomer Imke de Pater are involved in a large monitoring program aimed at following up on these rare and mysterious happenings in Jupiter’s atmosphere.

They were assisted in their Keck II observations by W. M. Keck Observatory support astronomer Randy Campbell. (ANI)

Filed under: Science and Technology

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