Neptune's Disappearing Clouds Linked to the Solar Cycle

August 17, 2023 10:00AM (EDT)Release ID: 2023-019
This sequence of Hubble Space Telescope images chronicles the waxing and waning of the amount of cloud cover on Neptune. This display shows Hubble snapshots of the planet taken in the years 1994, 1998, 2000, 2002 (top row, from left to right) and 2006, 2010, 2015, 2020 (bottom row, from left to right). The planet is blue (due to methane absorption of red light in its atmosphere) and the high-altitude, cirrus-like clouds are white. A comparison of Neptune's cloud cover corresponds to peaks in the 11-year-long repeating solar cycle where the Sun's level of activity rhythmically rises and falls. Apparently, an increase in solar ultraviolet radiation causes chemical changes that affect Neptune's amount of cloud cover.

Summary

As Sunspots Come and Go, So Does the Cloudy Weather on the Blue Giant Planet

Weather forecast for Neptune: After sunny weather for the past few Earth years, we'll see increasingly more clouds over the next few years.

In 1989, NASA's Voyager 2 spacecraft provided the first close-up images of linear, bright clouds, reminiscent of cirrus clouds on Earth, seen high in Neptune's atmosphere. They form above most of the methane in Neptune's atmosphere and reflect all colors of sunlight, which makes them white.

On that frozen frontier the Sun is still influential regarding the Neptunian weather that produces cloud cover. At Neptune's distance of nearly 3 billion miles, the Sun appears starlike at 1/30th the diameter of the full Moon. This feeble radiation is 1% the amount of starlight as received on Earth.

Yet the Sun's influence on Neptune became increasingly obvious when astronomers looked at 30 years of Neptune observations with the Hubble and Keck telescopes. Neptune's abundance of clouds waxes and wanes over an 11-years cycle. The Sun also has an 11-year cycle where it becomes stormy as its magnetic fields become entangled, increasing sunspot number and rate of violent outbursts.

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