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Дата изменения: Mon Dec 4 14:13:49 2000
Дата индексирования: Sat Dec 22 12:08:49 2007
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Поисковые слова: обвмадеойс нефептощи рпфплпч
PHOTO RELEASE FOR WED OCT. 14

HUBBLE FINDS MANY BRIGHT CLOUDS ON URANUS

A recent Hubble Space Telescope view reveals Uranus surrounded by its
four major rings and by 10 of its 17 known satellites. This false-color
image was generated by Erich Karkoschka using data taken on August 8,
1998, with Hubble's Near Infrared Camera and Multi-Object Spectrometer.

Hubble recently found about 20 clouds - nearly as many clouds on Uranus
as the previous total in the history of modern observations. The
orange-colored clouds near the prominent bright band circle the planet
at more than 300 mph (500 km/h), according to team member Heidi Hammel
(MIT). One of the clouds on the right-hand side is brighter than any
other cloud ever seen on Uranus.

The colors in the image indicate altitude. Team member Mark Marley (New
Mexico State University) reports that green and blue regions show where
the atmosphere is clear and sunlight can penetrate deep into Uranus.
In yellow and grey regions the sunlight reflects from a higher haze or
cloud layer. Orange and red colors indicate very high clouds, such as
cirrus clouds on Earth.

The Hubble image is one of the first images revealing the precession of
the brightest ring with respect to a previous image [LINK to PRC97-36a].
Precession makes the fainter part of the ring (currently on the upper
right-hand side) slide around Uranus once every nine months. The
fading is caused by ring particles crowding and hiding each other on
one side of their eight-hour orbit around Uranus.

The blue, green and red components of this false-color image correspond
to exposures taken at near-infrared wavelengths of 0.9, 1.1, and 1.7
micrometers. Thus, regions on Uranus appearing blue, for example,
reflect more sunlight at 0.9 micrometer than at the longer wavelengths.
Apparent colors on Uranus are caused by absorption of methane gas in
its atmosphere, an effect comparable to absorption in our atmosphere
which can make distant clouds appear red.

Credit: Erich Karkoschka (University of Arizona) and NASA