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Faint new ring discovered around Saturn

  • 21-09-2006 2:32am
    #1
    Moderators, Science, Health & Environment Moderators Posts: 1,426 Mod ✭✭✭✭


    The Cassini spacecraft has revealed a previously unknown ring around Saturn. It appears to be the result of meteoroids blasting material off the surface of two of Saturn's moons.
    The new ring is very faint, and it took a unique event in Cassini's tour around Saturn to reveal it. On Sunday, Cassini spent a record 12 hours in Saturn's shadow, which allowed it to scrutinise the rings as they were being strongly backlit by the Sun.
    Mission scientists found the new ring at the same orbital distance as Saturn's moons Janus and Epimetheus, which measure 194 and 138 kilometres across, respectively. That location suggests they may be the source of the ring's material.
    However, the moons are too small to have volcanic activity that could spew material into space the way Saturn's 512-kilometre-wide moon Enceladus does, says Cassini science team member Mark Showalter of the SETI Institute in Mountain View, California, US.
    "When an object is that small, it's basically a dead ice ball," he told New Scientist. "There really can't be much going on except the shooting gallery out there of meteoroids and little comets."

    Finer detail

    The team says the moons are so small that they cannot hold on to the dust stirred up by these impacts. The dust simply escapes into space, where it spreads out into a ring, he says.
    Several other rings in the solar system are thought to be generated this way. One is at the orbit of another small Saturnian moon called Atlas and others are associated with Jupiter's moons Thebe and Amalthea and Uranus's moon Mab.
    Not all moons are associated with rings, however. There do not appear to be any rings in the orbits of Saturn's small moons Prometheus and Pandora, for example. "Why don't all the little satellites have rings? That’s the more interesting question to address," Showalter says.
    During its passage through Saturn's shadow, Cassini also looked at the rings with its Composite Infrared Spectrometer. The measurements are still being analysed, but they should tell scientists how fast the particles that make up the rings rotate. This in turn provides clues to how frequently the particles collide with one another.
    The team also measured the way Cassini's radio signal varied as the spacecraft passed behind the rings as seen from Earth. This should allow the team to map the structure of the rings in finer detail than is possible from Cassini's images.

    dn10124-1_250.jpg
    Saturn's faint new ring, marked with a "+", is probably
    made of dust blasted off of two of Saturn's moons by
    meteoroids (Image: NASA/JPL/Space Science Institute)
    Source


Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,001 ✭✭✭✭Flukey


    Seeing Saturn's rings, even in a small telescope, is always a thrill. It's one of, if not the, best things to see in our Solar System.


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