Thursday, August 17, 2023

New Discovery: Our Local "Solar Max" Events Completely Change The "Weather" On Neptune -- Even Across 2.5 Billion Miles Of Inky Blackness...


This is a fabulous follow-on piece of NASA Hubble space discovery science.

After about two decades of observations, the team has shown a clear 12 year cycle pattern, in clouds on icy distant blue Neptune. The pattern is driven by eruptions, on our own Sol -- also a 12 year pattern, but delayed -- for two years of transit time, across the vast distances, to reach Neptune.

That is a startlingly wide-spread effect. Here's the full NASA story:

. . .When it's stormy weather on the Sun, more intense ultraviolet (UV) radiation floods the solar system. The team found that two years after the solar cycle's peak, an increasing number of clouds appear on Neptune. The team further found a positive correlation between the number of clouds and the ice giant's brightness from the sunlight reflecting off it.

"These remarkable data give us the strongest evidence yet that Neptune's cloud cover correlates with the Sun’s cycle," said de Pater. "Our findings support the theory that the Sun's UV rays, when strong enough, may be triggering a photochemical reaction that produces Neptune’s clouds."

Scientists discovered the connection between the solar cycle and Neptune's cloudy weather pattern by looking at 2.5 cycles of cloud activity recorded over the 29-year span of Neptunian observations. During this time, the planet's reflectivity increased in 2002 then dimmed in 2007. Neptune became bright again in 2015, then darkened in 2020 to the lowest level ever observed, which is when most of the clouds went away.

The changes in Neptune's brightness caused by the Sun appear to go up and down relatively in sync with the coming and going of clouds on the planet. However there is a two-year time lag between the peak of the solar cycle and the abundance of clouds seen on Neptune. The chemical changes are caused by photochemistry, which happens high in Neptune's upper atmosphere and takes time to form clouds. . . .


Now you know. . . out, grinning -- with grand nieces in tow, for the day, again!



नमस्ते

No comments: