Extraordinary phenomena occur uniquely on Saturn.
Something very exciting is going on Saturn; it's called a spoken season, and the planet isn't turning into a giant gaseous wheel. Let me tell you more about this. phenomenon each year, NASA's Hubble Space The telescope devotes some of its time to observing Saturn, a gas giant like me and the second-largest planet in the solar system, and this space body always has something new to surprise us with For example, look at one of the latest images. of the gas giant, see those smudgy spokes They mean that Saturn's spoke season is starting like our planet Saturn is tilted on its axis; that's why it has four seasons, but since the orbit of the gas giant is much larger, each of these seasons lasts about seven Earth years. Keep this in mind; it's important now. The next thing we need to talk about to understand the concept of the unique spoke season on Saturn is the equinox on Earth, it's the moment when the sun is exactly above the equator of the planet. and day and night are of the same length. But on Saturn, it's something a bit A different equinox occurs when Saturn's rings are tilted from the edge onto the sun, and even though equinoxes on Saturn happen every spring and fall, just like on our planet, they occur very seldom, roughly once every 15 Earth years. That's why astronomers are so excited. About this event, now look, there are two Smudgy spokes in this ring; it's called Ring B and is on the left of the picture. resemble the spokes on a bicycle. The shading and shape of the spokes vary. may seem dark or light; it depends on the angle and illumination; sometimes they might look like blobs instead of something with a classical radial spoke shape; they also don't last long, but more and more will. start to appear the closer we were to May 6, 2025; that's when the actual equinox Saturn will occur, but what caused the spokes? Astronomers think it might be the gas giant's magnetic field when the planetary magnetic field interacts with the solar wind, it creates an electrically charged environment on Earth, which results in the Northern Lights. also called Aurora Borealis, and if we speak about Saturn, the tiniest icy ring particles might get charged too, and it probably temporarily levitates these particles above the larger boulders. Rings consist of, for the first time, the spokes in Pn's Rings, which were spotted by NASA's Voyager Mission. It happened in the early 1980s at the time. We didn't know that these spokes were a seasonal phenomenon. Voyager 2 just passed by the planet and then sped on to figure out what these spokes were and how they functioned. Astronomers needed a space telescope that could observe Saturn's rings from afar, like Hubble. The latest Equinox on Saturn occurred in 2009 At that time, NASA's Cassini space probe was traveling around the gas giant. sent many amazing images back to Earth. It quickly proved that the spokes weren't caused by gravitational interactions with Saturn or the influence of the gas giant moons or small moonlets, which make up the planet's rings. It was the year 2005 when Cassini confirmed that the speakers were related to Saturn's magnetic field. The mission was finished in 2017; now Hubble keeps its long-term monitoring of the changes on and around Saturn. Despite all the observations, astronomers still can't predict the beginning and duration of the speaking season.