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Waspie_Dwarf
The Vanishing Rings of Saturn


March 18, 2008: What are the signs of spring? They are as familiar as a blooming Daffodil, a songbird at dawn, a surprising shaft of warmth from the afternoon sun.

Saturn: jewel of the solar system, taker of breaths, ringed beauty. Even veteran astronomers can't help but gasp when they see her through a small telescope.

Red Alert: Saturn's rings are vanishing.

Around the world, amateur astronomers have noticed the change; Saturn's wide open rings are rapidly narrowing into a thin line. Efrain Morales Rivera sends these pictures taken through a backyard telescope in Aguadilla, Puerto Rico:

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"The rings have narrowed considerably in the last year," he reports. "The Cassini division (a dark gap in the rings) is getting hard to see."

Four hundred years ago, the same phenomenon puzzled Galileo. Peering through a primitive spy glass, he discovered Saturn's rings in 1610 and immediately wrote to his Medici patrons: "I found another very strange wonder, which I should like to make known to their Highnesses…." He was dumbfounded, however, when the rings winked out little more than a year later.

What happened?

The same thing that's happening now: we're experiencing a "ring plane crossing." As Saturn goes around the sun, it periodically turns its rings edge-on to Earth—once every 14-to-15 years. Because the rings are so thin, they can actually disappear when viewed through a small telescope.

In the months ahead, Saturn's rings will become thinner and thinner until, on Sept. 4, 2009, they vanish. When this happened to Galileo in 1612, he briefly abandoned his study of the planet. Big mistake: ring plane crossings are good times to discover new Saturnian moons and faint outer rings.

It's also a good time to behold Saturn's curiously blue north pole. In 2005 the Cassini spacecraft flew over Saturn's northern hemisphere and found the skies there as azure as Earth itself. Saturn is a planet of golden clouds, but for some reason clouds at high northern latitudes have cleared, revealing a dome of surprising blue.

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Above: Cassini's view of Saturn's blue north: full story.

For years, only Cassini has enjoyed this view because from Earth, the blue top of Saturn was hidden behind the rings. No more: "Now that Saturn's rings are only open 8 degrees, we can finally view its northern hemisphere's beautiful teal blue colored belts and zones, which really did look blue through my 10-inch telescope," reports Dan Petersen of Racine, Wisconsin, who took this picture on Feb. 24, 2008.

Galileo never understood the true nature of Saturn's rings. He didn't know that they were a disk-shaped swarm of orbiting moonlets ranging in size from microscopic dust to tumbling houses. (Scientists still aren't sure, but they may be debris from a shattered moon.) He didn't even know the rings were rings. Through his 17th-century telescope, they looked more like ears or planetary lobes of some kind.

Yet, somehow, his intuition guided him to make a correct prediction: "they'll be back," or Italian words to that effect. And he was right. Saturn's rings opened up again and scientists resumed their study. In 1659, Christaan Huygens correctly explained the periodic disappearances as ring plane crossings. In 1660, Jean Chapelain argued that Saturn's rings were not solid, but made instead of many small particles independently orbiting Saturn. His correct suggestion was not widely accepted for nearly two hundred years.

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Above: Saturn's rings are wide but very thin. Astronomers using the Hubble Space Telescope captured this image of the rings edge-on in 1995. Star-like objects in the ring plane are icy satellites. more


Almost 27 ring plane crossings later, we still marvel at Saturn. Even with rings diminished, she is still a breathtaking sight through the meanest of telescopes. Indeed, this is a good week to look. On Tuesday, March 18th (sky map), and Wednesday, March 19th (sky map), the nearly-full Moon and Saturn will be lined up in the same part of the evening sky. That makes Saturn unusually easy to find: Go outside after sunset and look around for the Moon; Saturn is the bright golden "star" nearby.

Point your telescope and, well, just try not to gasp.

Looking Ahead : If you miss the March 18-19 encounter, try again on April 14-15. The Moon and Saturn will be close together and the rings even narrower. Mark your calendar!

Editor: Dr. Tony Phillips | Credit: Science@NASA

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More Information


Frequently asked questions about Saturn's ring plane crossings

Galileo and Saturn -- from Rice University's galileo Project

NASA's Future: The Vision for Space Exploration

Source: Science@NASA
Ghost Ship
Thank goodness. I thought they were really dissapearing. Thanks for posting this.
theSOURCE
I hope this isn't too off topic but what are the latest theories regarding the formation of Saturn's rings? Is it still that they are the remnants left over when the planet formed or has it been theorized that they are the result of a cataclysmic collision that destroyed a moon that once orbited Saturn?

I know I could have easily researched this info but (if my question is answered) I thought it might be informative to other forum members.

Thank you, won't we?

Waspie_Dwarf
QUOTE (theSOURCE @ Mar 30 2008, 06:49 AM) *
I hope this isn't too off topic but what are the latest theories regarding the formation of Saturn's rings? Is it still that they are the remnants left over when the planet formed or has it been theorized that they are the result of a cataclysmic collision that destroyed a moon that once orbited Saturn?

I know I could have easily researched this info but (if my question is answered) I thought it might be informative to other forum members.

Thank you, won't we?

It is possible that at least some of the rings were created by a collisions between small moons, however this does not seem to be the full answer. Some of the rings seem to be associated with existing Moons such as Enceladus. Enceladus has huge geysers which spray material into space. This seems to replenish some of the finer ring material.

This topic: Saturn's Rings - New Discoveries should help.
theSOURCE
Wow. I had no idea that such an informative thread about Saturn's rings existed. It's a very interesting read.

Thank you Waspie. thumbsup.gif
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