|
NEPTUNE IN PRIMARY COLORS
These two NASA
Hubble Space Telescope images provide views of weather on opposite
hemispheres of Neptune. Taken Aug. 13, 1996, with Hubble's Wide Field
Planetary Camera 2, these composite images blend information from different
wavelengths to bring out features of Neptune's blustery weather. The
predominant blue color of the planet is a result of the absorption of red and
infrared light by Neptune's methane atmosphere. Clouds elevated above most of
the methane absorption appear white, while the very highest clouds tend to be
yellow-red as seen in the bright feature at the top of the right-hand image.
Neptune's powerful equatorial jet -- where winds blow at nearly 900 mph -- is
centered on the dark blue belt just south of Neptune's equator. Farther
south, the green belt indicates a region where the atmosphere absorbs blue
light.
The images are part of a series of images made by Hubble during
nine orbits spanning one 16.11-hour rotation of Neptune. The team making
the observation was directed by Lawrence Sromovsky of the University
of Wisconsin-Madison's Space Science and Engineering Center.
|