Neptune, auroras
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Unlike the polar displays we see here on Earth, these auroras appeared closer to Neptune’s mid-latitudes—thanks to its bizarre magnetic field, which is tilted nearly 50 degrees off its rotation axis.
From BGR
Auroras on Neptune have been captured in detail for the first time.
From Daily Journal
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Neptune's elusive auroras have been finally revealed thanks to the James Webb Space Telescope. Astronomers scouring through the combined data from Webb and the Hubble telescope have discovered the presence of trihydrogen cation (H3+), which is created in auroras .
Using Webb’s near-infrared spectrograph, astronomers have captured new images of Neptune that finally reveal the planet’s mysterious auroral activity. Faint hints of Neptune’s auroras were first detected during Voyager 2’s flyby of the planet, but Webb’s latest discovery is the first direct evidence of the phenomenon.
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Space.com on MSNExoplanet 'baby pictures' reveal exomoons possibly taking shape around infant worlds"We can see, for the first time, rings of dust surrounding protoplanets made visible by the bright starlight reflecting off of them."
Long-Sought Auroral Glow Finally Emerges Under Webb’s Powerful Gaze Neptune lies in the cold, dark reaches of the outer edges of our solar system, about 3 billion miles from the Sun, at the farthest edge of the planetary lineup.