by Ann » Fri Nov 07, 2014 9:13 pm
Coil_Smoke wrote:An obvious question...Why is it green? I think this image attempts rendering natural colors. What chemical activity is responsible for this unusual coloring?
It isn't green, of course. The link that bystander gave us a link to shows that Dione was photographed through three filters, an infrared one, a green one and an ultraviolet one. Almost certainly, the infrared filter was mapped as red, and the ultraviolet filter was mapped as blue. The blue-gray parts of Dione reflect ultraviolet light very efficiently, and they are probably covered in fresh ice from the E ring ( and ultimately from Enceladus). The yellowish patch to the right is fairly bright in infrared light, most likely because it is centered on a (fresh) meteorite impact which led to a local injection of heat.
The green patch is not very infrared at all. It is cold, and quite possibly colder than the rest of Dione. It does a lousy job of reflecting ultraviolet light, too. This part of Dione is really only detected strongly by the green filter, which is why this part of Dione looks green here. In my opinion, we have no reason to suspect that Dione is green. The dark green color probably just means that this part of Dione reflects a bit of visible light (such as, for example, green) but not much else.
Ann
[quote="Coil_Smoke"]An obvious question...Why is it green? I think this image attempts rendering natural colors. What chemical activity is responsible for this unusual coloring?[/quote]
It isn't green, of course. The link that bystander gave us a link to shows that Dione was photographed through three filters, an infrared one, a green one and an ultraviolet one. Almost certainly, the infrared filter was mapped as red, and the ultraviolet filter was mapped as blue. The blue-gray parts of Dione reflect ultraviolet light very efficiently, and they are probably covered in fresh ice from the E ring ( and ultimately from Enceladus). The yellowish patch to the right is fairly bright in infrared light, most likely because it is centered on a (fresh) meteorite impact which led to a local injection of heat.
The green patch is not very infrared at all. It is cold, and quite possibly colder than the rest of Dione. It does a lousy job of reflecting ultraviolet light, too. This part of Dione is really only detected strongly by the green filter, which is why this part of Dione looks green here. In my opinion, we have no reason to suspect that Dione is green. The dark green color probably just means that this part of Dione reflects a bit of visible light (such as, for example, green) but not much else.
Ann