Open in App
  • Local
  • U.S.
  • Election
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Lifestyle
  • Education
  • Real Estate
  • Newsletter
  • LiveScience

    Space photo of the week: 1st-ever close-up of Neptune is Voyager 2's final portrait of a planet

    By Jamie Carter,

    2024-08-25

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1GN0Xx_0v9SL4cm00

    What it is: One of the final photographs of Neptune taken by NASA's Voyager 2 probe

    Where it is: 2.8 billion miles (4.5 billion kilometers) from the sun

    When it was taken: Aug. 25, 1989

    When it was shared: Aug. 19, 2024

    Why it's so special: Only one spacecraft has ever visited the eighth and most distant planet from the sun.

    On Aug. 25, 1989, NASA's Voyager 2 spacecraft took the first-ever close-up images of Neptune. This one — among the last full-disk photos taken before the probe ended its "Grand Tour" of the planets — became one of the most iconic. It revealed Neptune as a deep azure blue, which colored the public's perception of the planet for decades. (That is, until a new treatment of Voyager 2's images earlier this year revealed Neptune's true color to be a much lighter blue green.)

    Voyager 2's original images were taken in false color using filters — a standard technique used by planetary astronomers. In this case, blue and green filters were used alongside one that passes light at a wavelength absorbed by methane gas. According to scientists , hydrogen and helium dominate Neptune's atmosphere, but methane gives it its blue appearance by absorbing red light. The filters make methane look dark blue in this image, but they also reveal a semitransparent haze layer across the planet. The bright-red edge around Neptune is caused by the haze scattering sunlight at higher altitudes, above most of the methane.

    Related: Uranus and Neptune aren't made of what we thought, new study hints

    Voyager 2 took this shot almost precisely 12 years after it launched on a Titan-Centaur rocket from Cape Canaveral, Florida. Having visited Jupiter in 1979, Saturn in 1981 and Uranus in 1985, Voyager's closest approach to Neptune came on Aug. 25, 1989. During the flyby, Voyager also visited two of Neptune's moons, Triton and Nereid, and discovered six new moons and four rings .

    RELATED STORIES

    Space photo of the week: Stunning sand dunes slash across Mars' polar ice cap

    Space photo of the week: 900 alien worlds packed into a single image

    Space photo of the week: A young star sweeps up its cosmic neighborhood in vibrant new Hubble image

    Because Neptune is about 30 times farther from the sun than Earth is, it gets only a faction of a percent of Earth's sunlight, meaning Voyager 2 had to take long-exposure images. So engineers fired the fast-moving spacecraft's thrusters to have it rotate so the camera could remain focused.

    Voyager 2's images from Neptune were its last, sent back as radio signals with 13-watt transmitters — about enough power to run a refrigerator light bulb, according to NASA — and took four hours to travel across the solar system to NASA's Deep Space Network of radio antennae across the world.

    Neptune was Voyager 2's last stop before it traveled to the solar system's edge. The probe entered interstellar space on Nov. 5, 2018. Voyager 2 remains NASA's longest-running mission, even after encountering some communication problems last summer.

    For more groovy space photos, check out our space photo of the week archives . New stories post every Sunday.

    Expand All
    Comments / 2
    Add a Comment
    James Guillory
    08-27
    Such a waste of space. we are the size of ants which is crazy🐜
    Troy Woods
    08-27
    don't forget get in the last article they reported there is and exoplanet behind Jupiter . They of course reported it as if there was a planet ,not mentioning that it's not in our solar system . Do the math I'd the stars are infinite in or universe then planets must be infinite times what a thousand . I am here to say this . Why is this in the news .
    View all comments
    YOU MAY ALSO LIKE
    Local News newsLocal News
    Total Apex Sports & Entertainment3 days ago
    Total Apex Sports & Entertainment14 days ago
    Total Apex Sports & Entertainment13 days ago
    Total Apex Sports & Entertainment8 days ago

    Comments / 0