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What astronomers consider Saturn’s strangest ring now turns out to be one of the most transparent, at least in terms of the physics that shapes it. The first images of moonlet collisions within the rocky ring, called Ring F, have provided direct evidence for what makes this disk system so different from all the others.
“The F ring is just so bizarre, with its ever changing twists and turns, and multiple strands,” says Carl Murray, lead author of a new study about the ring. “The whole F ring region is a chaotic mixture of a ring trying to behave itself but being subjected to constant interruptions from nearby moonlets colliding with it.”
Using the Cassini spacecraft, Murray and his colleagues at
Queen Mary,
The astronomers saw sheared jets of matter extruding from the ring. The material spewed away from the ring’s core provided Murray and his colleagues with tracer material to detect how the objects’ impacts with one another and gravity actually shape the F ring.
What is unusual,
“Ultimately, the effect of collisions, in particular, has to
take its toll,”
Since 1979, when Pioneer 11 first discovered Ring F,
scientists have known that its appearance is constantly changing. But in the
new study,
What’s happening in Saturn’s disks resembles what’s
happening in the planet-forming regions around young stars, says Larry Esposito,
a planetary scientist from the
Because the F ring is transparent, he says, it is easy to see the collisions happening there, unlike in the other rings of Saturn, which are more hidden from view. The F ring, in essence, is one of astronomers’ only local laboratories for studying what happens when kilometer-sized objects are colliding, at relatively fast velocities, pretty much all the time, Esposito says.
Found in: Planetary Science

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