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Bright Clumps In Saturn Ring Now Mysteriously Scarce (Video)

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(N.Morgan) The universe is vast with its planets. stars, moons, and sun, it is timeless and ageless. Compared to the age of the solar system, which is about about four-and-a-half billion years, a couple of decades seem like next to nothing. Some planetary locales will change little over many millions of years, so for scientist who study the planets,  any object that evolves on such a short interval makes for a tempting target for study. And so it is with the ever-changing rings of Saturn. Case in point: Saturn’s narrow, chaotic and clumpy F ring. A recent NASA-funded study compared the F ring’s appearance in six years of observations by the Cassini mission to its appearance during the Saturn flybys of NASA’s Voyager mission, 30 years earlier. The study team found that, while the overall number of clumps in the F ring remained the same, the number of exceptionally bright clumps of material plummeted during that time. While the Voyagers saw two or three bright clumps in any given observation, Cassini spied only two of the features during a six-year period. What physical processes, they wondered, could cause only the brightest of these features to decline sharply? While a variety of features in Saturn’s many rings display marked changes over multiple years, the F ring seems to change on a scale of days, and even hours.

 

 

 

 

Trying to work out what is responsible for the ring’s tumultuous behavior is a major goal for ring scientists working on Cassini. “Saturn’s F ring looks fundamentally different from the time of Voyager to the Cassini era,” said Robert French of the SETI Institute in Mountain View, California, who led the study along with SETI Principal Investigator Mark Showalter. “It makes for an irresistible mystery for us to investigate.”The researchers hypothesize that the brightest clumps in the F ring are caused by repeated impacts into its core by small moonlets up to about 3 miles (5 kilometers) wide, whose paths around Saturn lie close to the ring and cross into it every orbit. They propose that the diminishing number of bright clumps results from a drop in the number of these little moonlets between the Voyager and Cassini eras. As for what might have caused the moonlets to become scarce, the team has a suspect: Saturn’s moon Prometheus. The F ring encircles the planet at a special location, near a place called the Roche limit — get any closer to Saturn than this, and tidal forces from the planet’s gravity tear apart smaller bodies. “Material at this distance from Saturn can’t decide whether it wants to remain as a ring or coalesce to form a moon,” French said. Prometheus orbits just inside the F ring, and adds to the pandemonium by stirring up the ring particles, sometimes leading to the creation of moonlets, and sometimes leading to their destruction.

 

 

 

A map of Saturn’s F ring from 2006 shows one of the few bright, extended clumps (indicated by a green box) seen during six years of observation by Cassini. Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/SSI

 

 

 

 

Every 17 years, the orbit of Prometheus aligns with the orbit of the F ring in such a way that its influence is particularly strong. The study team thinks this periodic alignment might spur the creation of many new moonlets. The moonlets would then crash repeatedly through the F ring, like cars in a Hollywood high-speed chase, creating bright clumps as they smash across lanes of ring material. Fewer clumps would be created as time goes by, because the moonlets themselves are eventually destroyed by all the crashes. As with any good scientific hypothesis, the researchers offer a way to test their ideas. It happens that the Voyager encounters with Saturn occurred a few years after the 1975 alignment between Prometheus and the F ring, and Cassini was present for the 2009 alignment. If the moon’s periodic influence is indeed responsible for creating new moonlets, then the researchers expect that Cassini would see the F ring return to a Voyager-like number of bright clumps in the next couple of years.

 

 

 

 

References:

 

http://www.nasa.gov/cassini

 

http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov

 

 

 

 

 

Cassini spied just as many regular, faint clumps in Saturn’s narrow F ring, like those pictured here, as Voyager did, but it saw hardly any of the long, bright clumps that were common in Voyager images. Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/SSI

 

 

 

More Stories Contributed By N. Morgan

 



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    • The Rift

      ” (N.Morgan) The universe is vast with its planets. stars, moons, and sun, it is timeless and ageless. Compared to the age of the solar system, which is about about four-and-a-half billion years, a couple of decades seem like next to nothing. Some planetary locales will change little over many millions of years, so for scientist who study the planets, any object that evolves on such a short interval makes for a tempting target for study. ” <——– ALL BASLESS CLAIMS THAT CANNOT BE PROVEN. Only if you buy the white cote lie though :lol:

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