
This false-color composite image shows auroras (depicted in green) above the cloud tops of Saturn's south pole. The 65 observations used here were captured by Cassini's visual and infrared mapping spectrometer on Nov. 1, 2008.
New mapping of the giant planet's upper atmosphere reveals likely reason why it's so hot.
The upper layers in the atmospheres of gas giants - Saturn, Jupiter, Uranus and Neptune - are hot, just like Earth's. But unlike Earth, the Sun is too far from these outer planets to account for the high temperatures. Their heat source has been one of the great mysteries of planetary science.
New analysis of data from NASA's Cassini spacecraft finds a viable explanation for what's keeping the upper layers of Saturn, and possibly the other gas giants, so hot: auroras at the planet's north and south poles. Electric currents, triggered by interactions between solar winds and charged particles from Saturn's moons, spark the auroras and heat the upper atmosphere. (As with Earth's northern lights, studying auroras tells scientists what's going on in the planet's atmosphere.)














Comment: Although there is much more to the story, this discovery isn't such a surprise for those familiar with electric universe theory, nor for those who have read Pierre Lescaudron's & Laura Knight-Jadczyk's book Earth Changes and the Human-Cosmic Connection
And, now that NASA has come to realize the above, one wonders when they and their mainstream colleagues will apply these same understandings and their effects to life on our own planet? It's notable that in recent years action in our own skies has been on the rise.
See also:
- Did Earth 'Steal' Martian Water?
- Comet ATLAS Y4 is breaking up
- Light from Betelgeuse faintest ever recorded, temperature way down in just 4 months, yet star has 'swollen' by 9%
- Evidence of giant plasma structures above Earth say astronomers
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