
Explanation: What's causing this unusual
aurora over Saturn?
No one is sure. Infrared images by the
robotic Cassini spacecraft of the north pole of Saturn have uncovered aurora
unlike any other seen previously in our Solar System. The strange aurora are
shown in blue in the above image, while the underlying clouds are shown in red.
The previously recorded, also-strange hexagon cloud patterns are visible in red
below the aurora. These Saturnian aurora can cover the entire pole, while
auroras around Earth and Jupiter are typically confined by magnetic fields to
rings surrounding the magnetic poles. More normal auroral rings had been
previously imaged around Saturn. The recently imaged strange auroras above
Saturn's north pole can change their global patterns significantly in only a few
minutes. The large and variable nature of these auroras indicate that charged
particles streaming in from the Sun are experiencing some type of magnetism
above Saturn that was previously unexpected.