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Astronomers may now know why Uranus and Neptune are different colours. Using observations from the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope, as well as the Gemini North telescope and the NASA Infrared Telescope Facility, researchers have developed a single atmospheric model that matches observations of both planets. The model reveals that excess haze on Uranus builds up in the planet’s stagnant, sluggish atmosphere and makes it appear a lighter tone than Neptune.
Neptune and Uranus have much in common — they have
similar masses, sizes, and atmospheric compositions — yet their appearances are
notably different. At visible wavelengths Neptune is a rich, deep azure hue
whereas Uranus is a distinctly pale shade of cyan. Astronomers now have an
explanation for why the two planets are different colours.
New research suggests that a layer of concentrated
haze that is present on both planets is thicker on Uranus than on Neptune and
therefore ‘whitens’ Uranus’s appearance more than Neptune’s [1]. If there was
no haze in the atmospheres of Neptune and Uranus, both would appear almost
equally blue as a result of blue light being scattered in their atmospheres
[2].
This conclusion comes from a model [3] that an
international team led by Patrick Irwin, Professor of Planetary Physics at
Oxford University, developed to describe aerosol layers in the atmospheres of
Neptune and Uranus [4]. Previous investigations of these planets’ upper
atmospheres had focused on the appearance of the atmosphere at only specific
wavelengths. However, this new model consists of multiple atmospheric layers
and matches observations from both planets across a wide range of wavelengths.
The new model also includes haze particles within deeper layers that had
previously been thought to contain only clouds of methane and hydrogen sulphide
ices.
“This is the first model to simultaneously fit observations
of reflected sunlight from ultraviolet to near-infrared wavelengths,” explained
Irwin, who is the lead author of a paper presenting this result in the Journal
of Geophysical Research: Planets. “It’s also the first to explain the
difference in visible colour between Uranus and Neptune.”
The team’s model consists of three layers of aerosols
at different heights [5]. The key layer that affects the colours is the middle
layer, which is a layer of haze particles (referred to in the paper as the Aerosol-2
layer) that is thicker on Uranus than on Neptune. The team suspects that, on
both planets, methane ice condenses onto the particles in this layer, pulling
the particles deeper into the atmosphere in a shower of methane snow. Because
Neptune has a more active, turbulent atmosphere than Uranus does, the team
believes Neptune’s atmosphere is more efficient at churning up methane
particles into the haze layer and producing this snow. This removes more of the
haze and keeps Neptune’s haze layer thinner than it is on Uranus, with the
result that the blue colour of Neptune looks stronger.
“We hoped that developing this model would help us
understand clouds and hazes in the ice giant atmospheres,” commented Mike Wong,
an astronomer at the University of California, Berkeley, and a member of the
team behind this result. “Explaining the difference in colour between Uranus
and Neptune was an unexpected bonus!”
To create this model, Irwin’s team analysed archival
data spanning several years from the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope. This
spectrographic data was obtained with Hubble’s Space Telescope Imaging
Spectrograph (STIS), covering a broad range of wavelengths from ultraviolet
through to visible and infrared (0.3–1.0 micrometres). It was complemented with
data from ground-based telescopes: a set of new observations from the Gemini
North telescope, and archival data from the NASA Infrared Telescope Facility,
both located in Hawai‘i.
Not only did the team examine the spectra of the
planets, they also made use of some of the many images Hubble has taken of the
two planets with its Wide Field Camera 3 (WFC3) instrument. Hubble provides
excellent views of the distinctive atmospheric storms shared by both planets
known as ‘dark spots’, which astronomers have been aware of for many years. It
wasn't known exactly which atmospheric layers were disturbed by dark spots to
make them visible to Hubble. The model produced by the team explains what gives
the spots a dark appearance, and why they are more easily detectable on Uranus
compared to Neptune.
The authors thought that a darkening of the aerosols
at the deepest layer of their model would produce dark spots similar to those
seen on Neptune and perhaps Uranus. With the detailed images from Hubble, they
could check and confirm their hypothesis. Indeed, simulated images based on
that model were seen to closely match the WFC3 images of both planets,
producing dark spots visible at the same wavelengths. The same thick haze in
the Aerosol-2 layer on Uranus that causes its lighter blue colour is believed
also to obscure these dark spots more often than on Neptune.
Reference: Research Paper , ESA
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