Category Archives: astronomy

The Vortex Lives!

Hypnotic Cloud Movements on a Sister Planet

Venus’s dynamic vortexIt’s mysterious. It looks alive. And, like so many other “mysteries” of the solar system, it has a name: the South Polar Vortex. Is this a place on Earth, like the so-called Oregon Vortex or the one that hooks tourists to seek out new age “wisdom” at Sedona, Arizona?

Nope. This one’s on Venus, and unlike the optical and “psychic” illusions hawked in the other two places, this one’s a real phenomenon. It’s a region in the polar atmosphere of Venus where atmospheric gases flow at different levels of the atmosphere. The undulating motion is a lot like what you might see if you pulled the plug on a bathtub full of water as the hot liquid gurgles down the pipes.

According to the folks at the European Space Agency, which runs the Venus Express mission currently studying our cloud-covered planetary neighbor, it’s not completely clear how the vortex formed and stays in place. Colin Wilson, at the University of Oxford, had a plausible suggestion grounded in every day atmospheric physics: “One explanation is that atmospheric gases heated by the Sun at the equator, rise and then move poleward,” he said. “In the polar regions, they converge and sink again. As the gases move towards the poles, they are deflected sideways because of the planet’s rotation.”

Wilson and others will keep a close eye on this vortex that is quite similar to other atmospheric vortices on Earth, including those observed at the centers of hurricanes. Nothing new-aged here, folks: it’s all good, solid planetary science!

The Seeds of Life

Cosmochemistry in Action

It’s pretty common knowledge in astronomy these days that planets grow from seeds hidden in clouds of gas and dust around other stars. Thats how our solar system got started a few billion years ago, and studying how it happens elsewhere helps us understand the birth of our own planet. But, the big question is always, “What about life?”

protoplanetary disk

The Spitzer Space Telescope has been peering into clouds of gas and dust enshrouding nearby stars, and discovering the seeds of life. What are those seeds? Organic molecules (in the form of gases) and water vapor, to name a couple.

Two scientists who use SST, John Carr of the Naval Research Laboratory, and Joan Najita of the National Optical Astronomy Observatory (in Tucson, Arizona), used Spitzer’s infrared spectrograph to measure and analyze the chemical elements in a protoplanetary disk around a young star called AA Tauri. It’s less than a million years old and is pretty typical of young stars that have the cosmochemical seeds of life scattered around them in dense, dusty disks.

Other scientists are using Spitzer to look for water molecules in these same types of disks. And, they’re finding them.

This is important work, folks. Water and organics are two of the big three things you need to form life. But, before we get carried away and start thinking of little green beings from AA Tauri, keep in mind that the planets have to form first. Then the life will come (if all the conditions are good for it). It’s a big deal right now to find these materials in places other than our own solar system. It means the conditions for planets like Earth to form are out there. And, the existence of organics and water tell us that some billions of years from now, life might exist on planets around these stars. Visit the Spitzer news announcements for more background on this new set of findings.