Transcript
Page 1: Age and Evolution of Saturn’s Rings

Age and Evolution of Saturn’s Rings

Larry W. Esposito, Bonnie K. Meinke, Nicole Albers and Miodrag Sremcevic

LASPThird Moscow Symposium

11 October 2012

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Key Cassini Observations

• High resolution images of propellers, straw, embedded moons, F ring objects. These show aggregation in the rings!

• Occ’s confirm structure, self-gravity wakes, B ring propellers, ghosts. More evidence for aggregates.

• Equinox images: embedded objects• Key question: Are Saturn’s rings young

or old?

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Sub-km structure seen in wavelet analysis varies with longitude

• Wavelet analysis from multiple UVIS occultations is co-added to give a significance estimate

• For the B ring edge, the significance of features with sizes 200-2000m shows maxima at 90 and 270 degrees ahead of Mimas. Same distance where objects are seen in the images!

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We identify this structure as temporary clumps

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Edges also show structure

• Some of this can be explained by multiple modes

• Other sharp features appear stochastic, likely caused by local aggregates

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FromAlbers etal2012

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F ring Observations• 27 significant features in F ring: ‘Kittens’

from 22m to 3.7km, likely they are elongated and transient

• They have weak correlation to Prometheus, may evolve into moonlets

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New Features

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I Gatti di Roma: temporary features in an ancient structure

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We identify our ‘kittens’ as transient clumps

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Prometheus excites F ring structures

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Buerle etal 2010:Bright spots cast shadows.

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Predator-Prey Equations for Ring Clumping

M= ∫ n(m) m2 dm / <M>; Vrel

2= ∫ n(m) Vrel2 dm / N

dM/dt= M/Tacc – Vrel2/vth

2 M/Tcoll

[accretion] [fragmentation/erosion]

dVrel2/dt= -(1-ε2)Vrel

2/Tcoll + (M/M0)2 Vesc2/Tstir

[dissipation] [gravitational stirring]

- A0 cos(ωt) [forcing by streamline crowding]

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Predator-Prey model of Moon-triggered Accretion?

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V2

M

Phase plane trajectory

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Rare accretion can renew rings• Solid aggregates are persistent , like the

absorbing states in a Markov chain• Even low transition probabilities can

populate the states: e.g., 10-9 per collision to an absorbing state

• These aggregates can renew the rings:– shield their interiors from meteoritic dust

pollution – release pristine material when disrupted by

an external impact

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Analogy: Coast Redwoods

1 in 104 seeds grows to a tree!

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Like Beijing, rings containboth new andancient structures!

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Conclusions

• Although rings show youthful features, this may imply renewal instead

• Changes since Voyager and abundant embedded objects indicate accretion

• A predator-prey model shows how moons can trigger accretion today

• Are rings young or old? Yes, maybe both!

• Key measurement: Ring mass in 2017.


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