More Images of Saturn
1
Chandra X-ray Image of Saturn
Saturn's X-radiation as detected by Chandra is concentrated near the
equator. This is different from a similar gaseous giant planet, Jupiter,
where the most intense X-rays are associated with the strong magnetic
field near its poles.
Scale: Image is 42 arcsec per side; the disk of Saturn is 17.5
arcsec in diameter
(Credit: NASA/U. Hamburg/J.Ness et al.)
2
HST Optical Image of Saturn
The optical image of Saturn is due to the scattering of visible
wavelength light from the Sun. The optical image is much brighter than
the x-ray image (above), shows more detail, and shows the beautiful ring
structures, which were not detected in X-rays. This is because the Sun
emits about a million times more power in visible light than in X-rays,
and X-rays scatter less efficiently from a cold surface such as Saturn.
Scale: Image is 42 arcsec per side; the disk of Saturn is 17.5
arcsec in diameter
(Credit: NASA/STScI)
3
Chandra X-ray Image with Scale Bar
Scale bar = 10 arcsec
(Credit: NASA/U. Hamburg/J.Ness et al.)
Return to Saturn (08 Mar 04)