Press Release

Best Infrared Images of Neptune and Titan

By SpaceRef Editor
January 14, 2000
Filed under

Contact: Gordon Yano

Phone: (925) 423-3117

E-mail: yano1@llnl.gov

January 14, 2000

NR-00-01-04

LIVERMORE, Calif. — The best Earth-based images ever taken of Neptune and Titan, Saturn’s
largest moon, will be revealed today at the annual meeting of the American Astronomical
Society in Atlanta.

The images of the distant celestial bodies were captured in infrared light using the W.M. Keck II
telescope in Hawaii, the world’s largest. They are among the first Keck images taken with
adaptive optics technology, which uses rapid mirror adjustments to remove Earth’s
atmospheric turbulence from the telescope’s images, producing unprecedented clarity.

Taken in the past months, the images surpass what would be possible using even the Hubble
Space Telescope. They reveal giant Neptunian storms driven by prevailing winds of 600 miles
per hour. The Titan images reveal features that could be frozen landmasses separated by chill
hydrocarbon seas and lakes.

The images are the work of a team of researchers led by Dr. Claire Max of the U.S.
Department of Energy’s Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, and include scientists from
the University of California at Berkeley, UCLA, and Keck Observatory. The work was supported
by the Energy Department, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration and the
National Science Foundation’s Center for Adaptive Optics. The Keck I and II telescopes are
operated by the California Association for Research in Astronomy.

Neptune and Titan were chosen as early subjects for Keck’s new adaptive optics system
because they are bright but mysterious objects of which little is known, but which offer enticing
spatial detail.

On Neptune, a giant gas ball of a planet 2,800,000,000 miles from Earth, Keck’s infrared
detectors penetrated into the deep layers of the planet’s roiling atmosphere, where giant
storms are born of the heat generated by the planet’s still-contracting core. Storm features
are pulled completely across the face of the planet as Neptune whirls through its 16-hour day.
At the north pole, a mysterious haze crowns the planet.

Keck’s adaptive optics images of Neptune are helping scientists study the planet’s storms and
their evolution, a first step toward understanding Neptune’s weather and climate.

“Neptune is one of the most dynamic of the giant planets,” said Dr. Bruce Macintosh of the
Livermore Lab. “It’s always changing. Being able to study it from the ground on a continuous
basis, rather than waiting for a spacecraft to fly by, is a huge advantage.”

The images of Titan will tell astronomers about the complex surface composition of the
Saturnian moon, a frigid world some 800 million miles from the sun. Titan has a nitrogen-rich
atmosphere similar to that of the early Earth. Sunlight shining on this atmosphere produces a
deep orange haze that obscures Titan’s surface from view at visible wavelengths.

Livermore scientists Macintosh and Dr. Seran Gibbard have been studying Titan for several
years at Keck using earlier image processing techniques and computer models. But Keck’s new
adaptive optics images, taken in infrared light, have much greater sensitivity. They pick out
features “that may be cold hydrocarbon seas and lakes,” said Gibbard. Other features might
be highlands, and one dark area appears to be a large impact crater or great basin.

In 2004 the Cassini spacecraft, built by NASA and the European Space Agency, is scheduled to
land the Huygens probe on Titan. Keck’s new images will help researchers determine beforehand
whether the probe will plunge into the first extra-terrestrial sea or land on a solid surface.

“Combining the power of Keck with adaptive optics is taking us to new worlds,” said
Livermore’s Max. “That’s an extremely exciting prospect as we enter the next millennium.”

Adaptive optics works by using a continuously deformable mirror and a lightwave sensor to
correct light beaming into a telescope. The sensor determines how much Earth’s atmosphere is
disturbing the light reaching the telescope, and relays this information to the deformable
mirror, which corrects the image every few milliseconds. Lawrence Livermore researchers
worked with Keck scientists on installation of the Keck adaptive optics technology.

In coming months, a new spectrograph will be added to the Keck adaptive optics system. This
will help answer questions about the chemical composition and physical state of the features
newly seen on Neptune and Titan.

Founded in 1952, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory is a national security laboratory,
with a mission to ensure national security and apply science and technology to the important
issues of our time. Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory is managed by the University of
California for the U.S. Department of Energy.

-end-

For information on the W.M. Keck Observatory, Mauna Kea, Hawaii, contact: Andrew Perala at
(808) 885-7887 or aperala@keck.hawaii.edu .

IMAGE CAPTION:

[Figure 1: http://www.llnl.gov/PAO/photos/NeptuneFigure1cap.html]

Image of Neptune taken with the Keck II Telescope adaptive optics system in infra-red light
(wavelength 1.65 microns), on June 27, 1999. A prominent storm system can be seen on the
lower right of Neptune’s disk. Haze can be seen over the North Polar regions (top). The spatial
resolution achieved corresponds to 250 miles on Neptune, which is at a distance of 2.8 billion
miles from Earth. This image and the following one use shades of orange to represent the
intensity of infra-red light.

[Figure 2: http://www.llnl.gov/PAO/photos/NeptuneFigure2cap.html]

Image of Neptune without adaptive optics, for comparison with Figure 1. Image was obtained
on February 27, 1999.

[Figure 3: http://www.llnl.gov/PAO/photos/NeptuneFigure3cap.html]

Image of Neptune taken with the Keck II Telescope adaptive optics system in infra-red light,
wavelength 1.65 microns, on May 24, 1999. A prominent storm system can be seen on the
lower right of Neptune’s disk. Haze can be seen over the North Polar regions (top). This image
and the following ones use shades of blue to represent the intensity of infra-red light.

[Figure 4: http://www.llnl.gov/PAO/photos/NeptuneFigure4cap.html]

Image of Neptune without adaptive optics, for comparison with Figure 3.

[Figure 5: http://www.llnl.gov/PAO/photos/NeptuneFigure5cap.html]

Same as Figure 3, but using a different color scale, which may print better on some printers.

[Figure 6: http://www.llnl.gov/PAO/photos/Titancap.html]

Keck adaptive optics image of Titan, Saturn’s largest moon. The image was obtained in
infra-red light at a wavelength of 1.65 microns. The bright crescent at the southern rim
(bottom of image) is due to
scattering of sunlight by hazes in Titan’s atmosphere. The dark features in the northern
hemisphere (top half of image) are surface features. Titan’s surface is thought to consist of
highlands or continents made of ice (at Titan’s very cold temperatures, ice acts the way rock
does here on Earth). Titan is also predicted to have lakes or seas made of liquid hydrocarbons
(such as liquid ethane). Some of the dark regions seen in the northern hemisphere may
represent these dark lakes.

This image uses shades of orange to represent the intensity of infra-red light.

SpaceRef staff editor.