Embargoed Until: 12:00 p.m. (EST) December 14, 2000
In this Hubble telescope
picture, a curtain of glowing gas is wrapped around Jupiter's north pole like a
lasso. This curtain of light, called an aurora, is produced when high-energy
electrons race along the planet's magnetic field and into the upper atmosphere
where they excite atmospheric gases, causing them to glow. The aurora resembles
the same phenomenon that crowns Earth's polar regions. But this Hubble image,
taken in ultraviolet light, also shows the glowing "footprints" of
three of Jupiter's largest moons: Io, Ganymede, and Europa. Over the next two
months, Jupiter's aurora will be scrutinized by two observatories: the Hubble
telescope and the Cassini spacecraft, which will fly by the planet on its
voyage to Saturn.
Credit: NASA/ESA, John Clarke (University
of Michigan)